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Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Reviews of Wuthering Heights 2026 (IV)

On Tuesday, February 10, 2026 at 3:28 pm by M.   No comments
 Good ones

The I-Paper: (4 out of 5 stars)
Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi have great chemistry in Emerald Fennell's brash, funny, extravagant spectacle. (...)
Victorian purists, look away. From the moment Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights opens, with a public hanging in which the deceased’s involuntary erection is gazed at by an aroused nun, one thing is clear: do not watch this expecting Emily Brontë. This is Fifty Shades of Grey with windy moors and crinoline. (...)
I wanted more than glamourous despair and frilly dresses, and indeed the strength of the aesthetic threatens occasionally to overpower the raw emotion. Somewhere in this story was a more cohesive exploration of Mr Earnshaw’s complex legacy and the implications of slavish sexual devotion.
It’s so close to perfection but not quite there. Like Cathy, Fennell should look beyond the trappings of lavish design, and reach for greater depth. But, oh when she does, what a sight that will be. (Francesca Steele)
South China Morning Post: (4 out 5 stars)
Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights captivates with stunning visuals in the Yorkshire Moors and sizzling chemistry between Elordi and Robbie.
Released in time for Valentine’s Day, Emerald Fennell’s third film is being launched among a blitzkrieg of hype, focusing on Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie, its highly photogenic stars.
Usually, that is enough to make you wary. But Fennell’s take on Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel Wuthering Heights has the substance to back it up. Beautifully costumed, designed, shot and performed, the film is an impeccably made tale of doomed lovers, one that will bring a tear to the eye. (James Mottram)
Moviefone: (90 out of 100)
Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi steam up the screen in Emerald Fennell’s loose, lusciously perverse adaptation of Emily Brontë’s ‘Wuthering Heights.’ (...)
With Linus Sandgren’s breathtaking cinematography – which soars, climbs, and gallops through beautifully desolate, foggy, and craggy locations in Yorkshire -- Anthony Willis’ haunting score, and even the needle drops from Charli XcX (which sound anachronistic on paper but work here) all adding texture and immersion to the proceedings, Emerald Fennell and her cast have devised a truly towering romance in ‘Wuthering Heights.’
Purists may grumble about certain aspects, but this is an adaptation based on a particular vision – a vision that adds a modern edge to a book that, while still universal in its themes, is now nearly two centuries old. Even if you don’t care personally for this extravagant, extraordinary film, it may introduce new generations to the source text – making Cathy and Heathcliff immortal all over again. (Don Kaye)
Daily Telegraph: (3.5 out of 5 stars)
 Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi deliver sizzling chemistry in the new Wuthering Heights - but the “kinky, kooky” film will divide audiences. (...)
For a movie continually prepared to roll the dice, it is impressive just how often it makes a collect on the risks taken. (...)
The new Wuthering Heights definitely won’t go do well with the purists. It might even ruin Valentine’s Day for those wanting a little happily-ever-after to go with their chocolates, flowers and heart-shaped balloons.
However, any im-purists out there willing to go with the freaky flow of this strange and mercurial offering will love where it intends to leave them. (Leigh Paatsch)
Metro (4 out of 5 stars);
 Wuthering Heights is for the horny girls – we don’t need a man’s opinion. (...)
Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights is undeniably horny – but it’s also devastatingly emotional, pushing period dramas further into a new era that’s far more unhinged and romantic than Bridgerton. (...)
Some will argue that this Wuthering Heights feels like style over substance because half the book is missing, although it’s not the first adaptation to do this.
Fennell has clearly run rampant with feelings and vibes over obsessive faithfulness – but the wallop of its emotions still has the ability to transport audiences and linger afterwards.
Let us swoon in peace.
Some will love this Wuthering Heights and others will love to hate it, but it’s a triumphant reinterpretation from filmmaker Fennell that’s only stronger and more emotionally devastating for its perversions and dramatic ripping up of a much-loved text.  (Tori Brazier)
NME (4 out of 5 stars):
This sexed-up reimagining is a bonking success. (...)
Robbie is unafraid of playing up Cathy’s brattiness and selfishness, while Elordi – with his spot-on regional accent – has a combustible magnetism that bristles throughout the film. His temper and her jealousy are too hot, too greedy, as Kate Bush might say, and the same applies to the spicy sex scenes that are much edgier than your standard Victorian lit adaptation.
Those are among many liberties taken by Fennell, but like some of the costume and production design choices that kick in once Cathy is ensconced in her new life, they feel like intuitive and intentional decisions. She’s kept like a doll (literally, in one amusingly meta sequence), and the opulent trappings of her new life are sharply juxtaposed with the elemental, instinctive connection she has with Heathcliff. While it’s not the definitive take on the text, it’s a full-blooded and invigorating reimagining that prioritises feelings over faithfulness, to memorable results. (Matt Maytum)
Pedestrian (4 out 5 stars):
Although it isn’t a literal adaptation of Brontë’s novel (hence the quotation marks) and only covers the first half of the 400-page story, “Wuthering Heights” remains utterly engrossing. You’ll finish the film in need of a dark room, a good cry and a long moment to consider whether you’ve ever truly experienced love.
Yes, it may be slightly longer than necessary. Yes, BookTok audiences may be shocked by how it differs from the source material and how it downplays the novel’s themes of racial and social otherness. And yes, some scenes might make you feel uncomfortable and leave you thinking “what the hell is happening”. But if you’re a romantic, you’ll fall hard for this Gothic tragedy regardless.
So if you’re wondering why I’m suddenly looking at booking a trip to the windswept Yorkshire moor, wearing billowing white shirts to work and listening to “Chains of Love” on repeat, just know that “Wuthering Heights” has become my entire personality. (Lachlan Guertin)
 Awards Buzz (8 out of 10):
Even though it’s only February and the current awards cycle has yet to be completed, it is hard not to suggest that Wuthering Heights could emerge as a contender in below-the-line categories for next year. While not a surefire thing given the early release date, I do see a world where cinematography, costume design, production design, and score get nominated. From a craft perspective alone, this is a film that deserves to be recognized.
Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights is a breathtaking and visual work of art. This will be the film that firmly establishes Emerald Fennell as one of the most in-demand filmmakers working today. Audiences, especially those on BookTok, are going to be absolutely floored by what she has done with her bold, fearless, and visually striking adaptation of this beloved story. Wuthering Heights is destined to become a massive hit for Warner Bros and one that is sure to create a whole new generation of fans from audiences all around the world. (Scott Menzel)
Lukewarm

The Nightly: (3 out of 5 stars)
Margot Robbie film is a fevered, astonishing and infuriating mess.
Wuthering Heights is so cinematically beautiful, it’s a shame its Cathy and Heathcliff provoke cries of “OK, enough with your nonsense, you can both go jump off a bridge”. (...)
The chasm between Wuthering Heights’ characters encapsulates why this film is so chaotic. Performances from Oliver and Clunes that are so undeniably magnetic, and then the central romance that ultimately leaves you cold and feeling a bit gross .
Cathy and Heathcliff may represent raw desire, but it’s not love. They are pure id and we’re all presently too tired to indulge that bullsh*t.
But what is love in Wuthering Heights is its paragon of filmmaking craft. Come for the promise of hot romance, stay for the heartstopping production design and superb cinematography. It makes the whole endeavour worthwhile. (Wenlei Ma)
 If we take this picture as Fennell intended – a rowdy, sexed-up romance with impossibly gorgeous leads, fetching visuals and an atmospheric score – then it works. If you go looking for anything else, you’ll come away disappointed.
There are, of course, pros and cons to Fennell’s giddy, stripped-back approach. Rarely has a film this shallow looked and, indeed, sounded so spectacular.
The Cooper and Mellington chapters are lovingly crafted, and our own Alison Oliver is superb as Isabella, Edgar’s crazed sibling. Elordi’s central troublemaker is playful and conniving, but never truly dangerous. Robbie’s well-dressed heartbreaker is constantly on the brink of tears.
There have been better Heathcliff-and-Cathy screen pairings – but Fennell’s headliners are the first to look as if they might actually devour one another. (Chris Wasser)
Bad ones

While we’re trudging slowly through this, every 15 minutes we have to be reminded that Fennell is terribly, terribly, terribly shocking. I haven’t read the book, and I’ve no idea whether Fennell has, but I’m going to venture onto a limb here and suggest that the bondage scenes are her invention. Does the original feature Cathy pleasuring herself on the Yorkshire Moors? Again, I’m guessing not. (...)
It’s all very stylish, and the set designers clearly had a whale of a time: Cathy’s home looks like something out of Warhammer 40,000, while Edgar’s mansion has been built out of left-over sets from 1980s pop videos. But it’s style without depth, asking you to believe that true love means dying beautifully. And that being shocking is big and clever. (Robert Hutton)
 Torrid sex scenes and Margot Robbie can’t save it from being disappointingly mid. (...)
The film’s shortcomings aren’t just restricted to the plot.
No one was more excited than this critic to hear Fennell had tapped Charli XCX for the soundtrack, and the singer’s collab with the legendary John Cale, House, is a legit banger.
But there’s a disconnect in how the music is incorporated in the film, and you find yourself consciously thinking, “Oh, there’s another Charli XCX track”, rather than being swept up in the atmosphere it provides.
The whole point of getting Fennell to give us her iconoclastic take is to provoke a visceral response - you love it or you hate it.
Unfortunately, Wuthering Heights, for all its pomp and circumstance, doesn’t reach that level of emotion. (Ben O'Shea
RTÉ Radio has a 17-minute clip of Martina Devlin and Dr Sophie Franklin discussing 'The enduring legacy of Emily Brontë'. BBC Countryfile and The Independent explore the filming locations of Wuthering Heights 2026. Glamour Mexico (in Spanish) lists many adaptations of Wuthering Heights. Informador (Mexico) features the novel. Indy100 and Hube take a look at Cathy's bedroom. Sirius XM's SmartLess features Margot Robbie. Vogue reports on the Inaugural Vogue Book Club Rendezvous with Emerald Fennell. Glamour also announces that they're going to host an Exclusive Galentine’s Screening of Wuthering Heights in collaboration with Warner Bros. Having seen Wuthering Heights 2026, The Times concludes that Jacob Elordi is the hottest man on the planet.

PBS's Masterpiece recommends '10 Acclaimed Books Set in Yorkshire' including
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
In this classic 1847 Gothic novel, Brontë boldly offered a realistic portrayal of a woman’s inner life, acknowledging her struggles with natural desires and social constraints. The story unfolds in Yorkshire, following a seemingly simple orphan girl as she faces life’s challenges: a cruel and abusive aunt, harsh school conditions, and later, her love for Rochester despite his marriage to another. Yet Jane overcomes these obstacles through her determination, wit, and courage.
Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
Sister Emily Brontë published her 1847 masterpiece a few months after Charlotte’s Jane Eyre appeared. Wuthering Heights tells the passionate yet destructive story of the willful Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff, an orphan brought into her home. It chronicles their obsessive love, rigid social class barriers, and a cycle of revenge that haunts their families across generations on the Yorkshire moors.
Ranker recommends '15 Movies to Watch After 'Wuthering Heights'' inclusding
Emily
Why you'll like this movie:
Emily explores straight into the wild spirit behind Wuthering Heights itself, Emily Brontë. This isn’t your typical period drama; it’s got a streak of rebellion and untamed energy that matches the novel’s mood. Emma Mackey makes Emily both mysterious and relatable as she battles grief, family expectations, and her own fierce imagination. If you love stories about outsiders who refuse to be tamed, and want to peek behind the curtain at what might have inspired such a tempestuous love story, this film’s for you.
What the movie is about:
Emily Brontë struggles within the confines of her life, yearning for artistic and personal freedom. She finds romance before writing her seminal novel, "Wuthering Heights." (Harper Brooks)
Good Ones
Bold & Brilliant Reimagining of Classic Filmmaking (...)
Fennell proves a worthy addition to the growing roster of filmmakers who’ve refused to make a faithful adaptation of Brontë’s novel, thus screwing over schoolkids everywhere who are looking for a CliffsNotes-esque shortcut for their pending book reports. That some corners of social media have been quick to dismissively and derogatorily label this “fan fiction” as if Peter Jackson’s padded, terrible Hobbit films weren’t exactly that (or at least called out as vociferously at the time of their release) says a lot about our current culture’s misogynist leanings and Fennell being an unwitting lightning rod for it. Nevertheless, she’s crafted her best film to date – one that feels like a decadent homage to the sweeping melodrama of golden era Hollywood. (Courtney Howard)
Emerald Fennell's liberal adaptation of the classic novel – starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi – is one of the best movies of the year so far.
Fennell’s movie may not be a faithful-to-the-letter adaptation, but it’s good enough that it doesn’t matter. Elordi and Robbie are great together. The dialled-all-the-way-up sexual tension is crazy (probably helps that they’re two of the hottest people alive), especially in the first half of the movie, when they nearly yearn themselves into an embolism. But they play the romance even better; it’s impossible not to be affected by the purity of Cathy and Heathcliff’s devotion to each other, even in the face of what they perceive to be their own damnation. Fennell’s tactile filmmaking – regularly focusing in on their fingers interlocking, grazing each other’s palms, or penetrating each other’s mouths – makes you feel like you’re observing intimate moments you shouldn’t be privy to. Charli XCX’s jittery electronic score also helps amp up the romantic tension, and the needle drop of her new song “Chains of Love” hits hard (Fennell's critics like to say she's a music video director at heart, and there's certainly a great one for this song buried in the middle of the film).
This may well be Elordi’s best performance yet. Heathcliff is at times corrosive and appears capable of awful violence, but he’s also got real vulnerability to him. And yet, the real MVP of the movie, for my money, is Alison Oliver (who previously starred alongside Elordi in Saltburn). She plays Linton’s sister – a rich young woman with a dollhouse obsession who appears to have been driven half mad through social isolation – with a perfect Made In Chelsea–esque lilt.
At two hours and 14 minutes, it does stray into overlong territory – I probably could have done with maybe 20 minutes less yearning in the middle somewhere. But for the most part, the pearl-clutchers are wrong – Fennell has used her powers for good here. And whether they like it or not, “Wuthering Heights” is likely to be the defining movie of the first half of 2026. (Ben Allen)
Even so, “Wuthering Heights” remains an elegant, brutal, lustful gothic romance that refuses tasteful distance. It’s maximal and deliberately anachronistic, a big-screen fever dream of ache and viciousness that treats desire like an injury you keep reopening with your own hands. Fennell leans into excess not as provocation, but as emotional truth, letting obsession swell until it becomes the only language the film speaks. The feeling cuts here not as poetry, but as pressure—barbed wire wrapped tight around a heartbeat. In all its wildness, Fennell seals the film with an embrace and a bruise, then lands the kiss like a sudden dagger to the ribs. (Rodrigo Perez)
This is an extremely horny film. Spit and mucus and fluid seep from every frame. We see fingers slick with egg yolk and close-ups of snails weaving sticky trails. Everybody is constantly sopping wet and it’s only partly because of the weather. Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi – both magnetic, the camera drinking in their every pore – spend half the movie with their fingers in each other’s mouths. If your goal is to watch beautiful people shagging, “Wuthering Heights” will fill your bingo card many times over.
Wuthering Heights book cover featuring moody Yorkshire moors and gothic elements, highlighting classic literature theme
But it’s also a film of unusual beauty, every shot designed for maximum impact. Whether it’s Cathy walking across the moors, filmed from above with her wedding train billowing absurdly behind her, or Mr Earnshaw lying dead beside a mountain of empty bottles that reaches to the ceiling, it’s brilliantly, meticulously put together.
The backlash against this adaptation started before shooting even began – how dare someone treat Emily this way! – and I can’t help but wonder if Fennell doubled down on her vision, tearing up what remained of the novel in favour of this surreal, impressionistic, singular film. (...) To hell with the doubters: “Wuthering Heights” is a sublime carnival of excess, a bodice-ripper for the OnlyFans generation that stuffs you fit to burst but somehow leaves you wanting more.  (Steve Dinneen)
Stylist:
Fennell is never subtle in her symbolism – just watch the opening sequence that conflates an orgasm and a hanging – but the drama only adds to the striking appeal of this adaptation. From the literal black-and-white house Cathy was raised in to the world of colours she’s exposed to at Thrushcross Grange, it’s almost a cautionary tale that the shiny, material temptations of love can only leave you hollow.
The haters will continue to hate on this for not being the Wuthering Heights they know, and that is true, but the essence of the novel, the yearning, the hollow superficiality of love and toxic game-playing in love across the class divide, is heightened to such an excruciating degree. (...)
It will frustrate people for everything it’s not and everything it doesn’t claim to be, but if you can indulge in this film as Fennell’s erotically charged reimagining of Cathy and Heathcliff’s love, then you’re in for a delicious, disturbing and devastating watch. (Jeff Bacon)
 A glorious big screen epic that offers much to love on so many levels. (...)
It’s pretty amazing to. me that it’s taken so long for someone to convince a studio to finance such a sweeping epic with such a unique spin on Brontë that can connect even with those who normally wouldn’t find this movie to be their thing. (Edward Douglas)
The latest adaptation of Wuthering Heights may not pass muster for high school English classes looking for help with their homework. However, as a riff on the story's themes, it presents a sexy cast having a ball with all the manipulation. (Fred Topel)
The Standard (4 out of 5 stars)
 Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi have bags of chemistry in this unashamedly high-camp adaptation of Emily Brontë’s book. (...)
It’s all wildly fun, a fever dream come to life, though it’s not without its flaws. As the film lurches towards its ending, the edges do start to fray. Several plot threads are left hanging; the dramatic finale feels unresolved, and Heathcliff’s fate is left up to our imaginations. After weeping copiously at the ending, I left dissatisfied. When the sexy sugar rush passes, what’s left? (Vicky Jessop)
Lukewarm 
Slant Magazine (2 out 4 stars)
Like a particularly impressive aspic, the film is tantalizing to behold but not so easy to swallow. (...)
Fennell stops short of offering a truly penetrating message, turning Cathy’s desire for Linton into a clear-cut decision between love and vanity. Ultimately, Cathy rejects Heathcliff because she’s selfish and materialistic, not because she’s a 19th-century woman with limited prospects.
The way Fennell seemingly sees it, patriarchy is an annoyance, racial difference as a distraction, and love is simply a matter of choice. As for wealth, it’s the most suffocating of prisons. That’s a message that’s hard to take seriously in our current socio-historical moment, and doubly so given how Fennell is enamored with that particular cage and how it sparkles. (Rocco T. Thompson)
Geek Vives Nation (5 out of 10)
Although the film retains the novel’s Victorian English setting and style, “Wuthering Heights” possesses a thoroughly modern tone, steeped in wink-wink-nudge-nudge irony. Fennell seems to think that modern, Gen Z-driven audiences might receive the sweeping epic romance genre with skepticism, so she beats them to the punch with scenes that have an absurdist rhythm. (...)
So yes, Emerald Fennell knows exactly what she’s doing with her interpretation of “Wuthering Heights.” She wants to provoke discourse, regardless of fidelity to the source material, respect for the time period, and ostensible good taste. She ultimately achieves her aim. The most fruitful discourse comes from her sly send-up of epic romance, which evokes genuine passion and celebrates the genre. Sadly, the conversation falls apart as Fennell loses her grip on the material and slips into primary-color melodrama that teeters between vulgarity and tedium. For some, “Wuthering Heights” will be weapons-grade rage bait. As fair as that feels for our current cultural moment, it could’ve been so much more. (Brandon Lewis)
 The budget on-screen is what breathes life into “Wuthering Heights”, which whithers away until perking up with a gonzo, kinky, psychologically warped finale, even if it is one that softens the characters and doesn’t have the boldness to go anywhere near how nasty these characters become in the book. By the end, those quotations come to reflect indecision about what Emerald Fennell wanted to do with her adaptation. (Robert Kojder)
 Fennell acknowledges the fact that hers is a freewheeling adaptation of Emily Brontë’s doomed but deathless love affair between Heathcliff and Catherine Earnshaw by putting its title in quotation marks. The film was shot in Yorkshire but its design owes its idiosyncratic style to the current taste for “romantasy”.
Wuthering Heights, the Earnshaws’ gloomily decaying estate, looks as if it’s sitting between a northern variation on Stonehenge and an abandoned salt mine. Oversize spears of slate have popped up in inconvenient places and what remains of the house seems to be gradually sinking into the earth. In extravagant contrast, Thrushcross Grange, where Catherine goes to live after her marriage to Edgar Linton, is like a fusion of Fairyland and a five-star hotel in Dubai. (...)
Brontë laid all this out without editorialising and Fennell follows her example – but the gaudiness of the window dressing keeps getting in the way. (Sandra Hall)
 “Wuthering Heights” is not without its virtues, and its technical craftsmanship is itself worthy of being witnessed on the big screen. The costumes aren’t only beautiful, but help to convey things about the characters that are more powerful than dialogue. The score by Anthony Willis is overbearing, but successful in their sweeping epicness, and the original songs by Charli xcx are mostly terrific (“Chains of Love” could very well be an Oscar contender for Best Original Song next year). “Wuthering Heights” is too abrasive to be emotionally involved, yet not brave enough to be completely transgressive. Fennell is entitled to make something anew with “Wuthering Heights,” but what she’s come up with is only grasping at meaning. (Liam Gaughan)
"Wuthering Heights” dropping on Galentine’s Day couldn’t be more appropriate. It’s a raunchy and rotten love story made to be enjoyed with friends. If you love the book, perhaps skip it, but if you’re looking for two hours of visually enjoyable cinema followed by a few ‘can you believe they did that/omg I couldn’t tear my eyes away’ chats over wine with your girls, get those cinema tickets booked. (Bryony Jewell)
 Fans of Emily Brontë’s beloved novel would be wise to leave their expectations at the door – this wild take on the classic is, to put it generously, a very loose adaptation of its source material. Its structure is altered, key characters are significantly changed or missing entirely, and countless liberties are taken with the central relationship between Cathy and Heathcliff. (Fennell has been open about such changes, describing the film as being based on her memories of reading the book as a teen, rather than strictly faithful.) But, if you can look past that, it’s quite the ride. (...)
This Wuthering Heights, in its entirety, is a mixed bag which will provoke a barrage of Op-Eds, and as much outrage as adulation. But it’s also a film which feels seared into my brain – the eye-popping excess, the unbridled, tongue-in-cheek nastiness, the sheer scale and imagination of it all. See it on the biggest screen possible with as many friends as possible, and get ready to argue for hours afterwards. (Radhika Seth)

Bad ones 

The truth is that Fennell is a gifted director and a less accomplished screenwriter. She clearly enjoys recreating maximalist, eclectic settings, dressing her actress in beautiful but historically nonsensical costumes, and she has a sharp, effective eye for image, color, and composition. But she has also decided - one might say quite consciously - to remove anything that stood between her and her vision: precise but not faithful, striking like a two-and-a-half-hour music video, kitsch and excessive, an acrobatic game of desire and sexual repression. One thing, however, must be said: she hasn’t added anything. She has simply (and that is precisely the limitation) carefully selected the parts that interested her and discarded the rest. She discarded the concentric narrative structure, and she discarded much of the context. And if some scenes feel cringe, it may be because they’ve been lifted out of that context, not because certain lines sound exaggerated or archaic, or because the protagonists are tormented to the point of pantomime. Those elements, almost word for word, were already in the novel. The back-and-forth taken one step too far, the exaggerated, gothic declarations of otherworldly love. That’s all Emily Brontë, baby. (Priscilla Lucifora)

The good ones

The Australian (five stars out of five):
Strap yourself in. You will either love this or hate it. Brontë purists beware, but BookTok will go crazy for it. Me? Be still, my churning 14-year-old heart. After the clit-tease of a muscular marketing campaign we now get the actual product, ripe for Valentine’s Day. A film of such gleeful power it may well liquify your innards just watching it.
I inhaled this latest iteration of Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel not with my heart (as with the 1939 Laurence Olivier/Merle Oberon version,) nor with my head (the dour, overly earnest 2011 one), but with my groin. Writer/director Emerald Fennell’s fresh interpretation has electrified the franchise. I suspect it’s going to be huge, drawing in the fangirling young women who made Barbie, Six the Musical, Titanic and Taylor Swift such muscular successes. (...)
We see something far kinkier, yet true to the essence of the book. It’s all licking, fingering and flayed emotion, everything imagined and implied. And there we have the essence of women-directed sex, the new sexuality for the screen. Sex through the female gaze. What women actually want. Playful and tender. Foreplay and suggestion, rather than thrust. (...)
There’s no cautiousness to this, just as there wasn’t to the original novel. How can women filmmakers smash through the tight little bro club that bestows platforming and pay cheques upon certain clubby projects? With daring audacity, with bolshie irreverence. And here we have it. The aim: to be fearless. Brontë was. Fennell is. (Nikki Gemmell)

Pajiba

Not so Fennell, whose wild and deliciously vicious "Wuthering Heights" (the pretension of those quotation marks already spawning their own assembly line of snoozing derision) is here this Valentine's Day to rattle our tender parts with bone-shivering venom dressed up in Tom Petty music-video drag. This is a movie that knows the best love stories are all blood-lettings in minute (but sexy!) detail, and delivers just that. A deluge of melodrama, its bodice soaked through thick and mean, this movie leaves a heap of gorgeous corpses in its wake--ours included. I wouldn't have it any other way. (...)
Fennell's said she set out to make the version of Wuthering Heights that she felt and remembered feeling as a teenager reading the book, but divorced from page-and-number specificities. And her "Wuthering Heights" is the ecstatic truth of it. Bigger, bolder, red flesh in a hand-shaped welt over the heart, (Jason Adams)
There’s not an inch of flesh in Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights that isn’t flushed with arousal and glistening with a patina of trickling sweat. Not a bosom to be seen that isn’t straining to escape from the bondage of its corset. Not a shred of shirt fabric that isn’t rain-drenched and clinging to gym-chiselled musculature. To the surprise of precisely nobody, Fennell has had her wicked way with Emily Brontë’s cherished novel. This is less a respectful literary adaptation than a come-hither invitation to crawl down the cinema aisle on all fours and lick the screen. I enjoyed it immensely. (...)
Divested of glitter and sequins, of Cathy’s fabulous frocks and of the scorching stolen clinches, the film’s final act feels underpowered and the drama starts to drag. It is a shame, given how robustly red-blooded and raunchy this telling is at the beginning – an all-consuming passion that burns fast before it’s extinguished. (Wendy Ide)
Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi are electric in Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights. A dark, sultry, and devastating take on a classic. (...) 
Visually, the film is a triumph. The production design, the costumes, and the sweeping, moody sets are absolutely gorgeous – every single shot is a literal work of art. I’m not exaggerating when I say I would hang almost any frame of this movie on my wall as a poster (yes, even the slightly dirty ones). (...)
Emerald Fennell has proven once again that she is a master of tone. She takes the Gothic genre and turns it into something modern, sexy, and devastating. If you’re looking for a polite, tea-sipping period drama, this isn’t it. But if you want a film that haunts you long after the credits roll, Wuthering Heights has you covered. (Tessa Smith)
This movie absolutely tormented me, and I loved it for that; as I rooted for terrible, toxic, abusive monsters to be together because of the belief that Fennell instills in you about the smallest fraction of pure love inherently embedded deep within their destructive relationship. She has crafted a gorgeous, passionate, provocative (and incredibly horny) film, successfully exploring beauty and darkness that comes with every aspect of love and obsession. And thanks to a dynamic cast, including insane chemistry between Robbie and Elordi, as well as a scene stealing Alison Oliver, she genuinely has another strong entry into her already fantastic filmography. It will absolutely not be for everyone, and I anticipate it being highly divisive. Yet at the end of the day, Wuthering Heights drove me mad with its beauty and unflinching honesty, and I frankly wouldn’t have it any other way. (Mike Manalo)
 Emerald Fennell has written and directed a fascinating retelling of Wuthering Heights that makes you question if anyone is truly good at heart. I still maintain that in order to have a bigger impact in the story’s portrayal of Heathcliff, one could have incorporated his novel-based description of being dark-skinned in a way that gives visual life to the social, economic, and political views of the time period. While I did miss that from the film, there’s no doubt that Fennell’s reimagining of this Gothic tale will linger with you as it wuthers long after the credits roll. (Nikita Francois)
 While measuring the film’s potential for success has little to do with what I’m taking away quality-wise, it’s easy to see just how well this movie can play for an audience that may not be exactly dying for more Brontë on the screen. It comes down to the choices Fennell effectively handles in her interpretation of the material. That’s not to say a straightforward take on Wuthering Heights is impossible to pull off nowadays. Still, I’m happy to laud a director whose ambitions allow for a version of this story that makes room for provocative visuals, a direct approach to sexuality, and characters who visibly lean into their desires. And this is all while accompanied by extreme cinematic choices and music to match from a modern artist. For a film designed to be tantalizing in its own way, I was happy to meet it where it lies. (Aaron Neuwirth)  
 As soon as this project was announced, it was easy to assume that Fennell would show as much reverence for the classic text as she showed for the sanctity of a man’s grave in Saltburn. Except she defies that assumption by making sure that although “Wuthering Heights” remains a deliciously horny film, it does summon a certain degree of pure romance, especially in the few moments when its leads are able to see past their misunderstandings and actually connect. It’s a movie about how ugly people can be to each other, but also about the beauty they’re capable of — a message that, like the original text itself, remains timeless. (Liz Shannon Miller)
 As someone who has griped for months over this movie, I was surprised that I walked away from "Wuthering Heights" liking it as much as I did. The outrageous beauty and opulence of the movie props up a lot, as do Robbie and Elordi. This feels like a Wuthering Heights for our current era. One that is both contemporary yet hearkening back to a classic filmmaking style. The soul of the novel is there and "Wuthering Heights" stands on its own as yet another great adaptation of Brontë's novel. (Kristen Lopez)
Lukewarm

Emerald Fennell’s unfaithful adaptation of the Emily Brontë novel reignites the epic romance genre with an all-consuming love story and a pulsating Charli XCX soundtrack. (...) What remains constant throughout “Wuthering Heights” is the intense presence of the color red, a thematic choice to continuously depict the impassioned and fiery romance between the ill-fated characters. (Tessa Lapradez)
I  feel like Fennell works well with Elordi, especially as a romantic focus, maybe a muse of sorts. This is a film I could see watching again, and I do think it connects some things that a film like Materialists tried to talk about but ended up being less honest about. I believe “Wuthering Heights” works well with this new tension in our society, pushing conservative ideas of relationships versus what people actually want and how they actually live. (Julian Lytle)
As a designer, I applaud the craft that went into this film’s aesthetics. But pretty is NOT enough. “Wuthering Heights” is frequently so bombastic the emotion is muted. That’s a shame because these actors are giving ovation-worthy performances. And when it comes to dialogue, Fennell’s script pours out the good stuff like champagne—it sparkles, it’s clever, and it’s dangerous. That makes the flawed storytelling that much more perplexing. (Sherin Nicole)

The bad ones

Joy Sauce:

Had the film been somehow absent of race (if such a thing is even possible), then the idea of yet another white Heathcliff may have been just another cumbersome inevitability. However, its casting and rewriting gestures constantly towards racial identity as a central tenet of various characters.  (...)
In Wuthering Heights, gestures of yearning and obsession are only rendered with a steady artistic hand if deemed worthy by way of authorship—which, in this case, aligns unfortunately with the outdated traditions of Hollywood, and the inevitability of conventionally attractive white leads being the only deserving locus of serious cinema. Atop the numerous faults of this approach (primarily, as matter of unsavory optics), it speaks to an incompleteness within Fennell’s adaptation, whether by intent or inability, to imbue the story with a more multifaceted humanity that would have made its drama between Catherine and Heathcliff more difficult or more rigorous. Instead, what we’re left with is a series of vast, expressionistic backdrops that never feel grounded in the agony or ecstasy theoretically driving the story, as its beautiful leads struggle against a world that seldom constrains them with a shred of vigor or vehemence, eliciting little more than a shrug.
For all its fiery flourishes, the result is dull as a doorknob, and just as cold. (Siddhant Adhaka)
Region Free gives 1 out of 5 stars to a "sexless, dull, unimaginative" film:
It is possible to make a bad adaptation that is still interesting and rewarding in its own way. By contrast, it is something else entirely to make a bad adaptation that is also dull as dishwater. That is what writer, director, and producer Emerald Fennell has accomplished.
It is not the first bad adaptation of Emily Brontë's novel, and it won't be the last. It can't even claim the title of worst adaptation because it is so uninteresting that it doesn't deserve such credit. (...)
So it's a bad adaptation. It either misunderstands Brontë's original prose or refuses to engage with it. That is the prerogative of every filmmaker. But how does it stand on its own as a film?
Not well, to be honest. Your enjoyment will entirely depend on how much you're willing to engage with Fennell's empty provocations. For anyone who has seen an indie film or two, nothing here will shock or titillate. (...)
For its credit, Wuthering Heights occasionally impresses with beautiful vistas and a perfectly fine score from Charli xcx. Even if Fennell's vision is somewhere between Tim Burton and an Evanescence music video. A more interesting filmmaker would make a meal of the disparate elements. Here, they just dangle as trophies collected in an expensive vanity case. (...)
In fact, if you want to see something that's truly outrageous, but also brave and interesting, watch Ken Russell's incendiary study about control and repressed sexuality: The Devils. It has nothing to do with Wuthering Heights as a story, but, then again, neither does this. (Joonatan Itkonen)
According to Rendy Reviews, "this all could’ve been prevented if Ao3 was made in Fennell’s youth". (1.5 out of 5):
The filmmaker’s adaptation, sorry, “reimagining” – hence the title's use of, and insistence on referring to it with, its quotations – of Emily Brontë’s classic romance deconstructing love in conflict of inner desire under class and racial disparity arrives as if it were meant to come out around the 2010s. Remember when studios were going for the Hot Topic/Twilight crowd with Red Riding Hood, Beastly, Beautiful Creatures, etc.? Around that same time, another piece of Twilight-influenced media, Fifty Shades of Grey, dropped, and female-gaze smut made a resurgence in the mainstream. (...)
Despite its breathtaking production and art direction – enough to make cottagecore-obsessed Tumblr users and Pinterest board makers go mad – Fennell's “Wuthering Heights” is a completely hollow misinterpretation of the source. It’s too dull, tame, and frustrating in her substance enough to make Emily Brontë roll in her grave. (Rendy Jones)
10:34 am by Cristina in ,    No comments
The reviews of Emerald Fennell's Wuthering Heights are in, and they're a mixed bunch. Most of them make for very entertaining reads as they have hilariously witty comments. Some of them do sound as if they could have been written well ahead of actually watching the film, though.

The good ones:

The Telegraph gives five out of five stars for this "brazenly unfaithful Emily Brontë adaptation that takes Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi to trembling, transgressive depths":
You could never accuse Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights of being a faithful adaptation of Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel – but then fidelity doesn’t appear to be remotely of interest to it. Resplendently lurid, oozy and wild, the new film from the director of Saltburn and Promising Young Woman is fixated on its central illicit affair, as conducted by Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi, to the exclusion of almost all else. It’s an obsessive film about obsession, and hungrily embroils the viewer in its own mad compulsions. (...)
Trysts are underscored with a series of breathy electro-ballads from Charli XCX. Race-blind casting opens up fruitful new angles on familiar characters: Shazad Latif is superb as Cathy’s suitor Linton, here a hesitant, nouveau riche nice guy; and Hong Chau is just as good as Nelly, her watchful lady’s companion, whose mixed bloodline creates its own complications. The era-straddling sets and costumes share a gasp-inducing sugar-high aesthetic: Jean-Honoré Fragonard meets Juicy Couture. (...)
Style over substance? Not at all – it’s more that Fennell understands that style can be substance when you do it right. Cathy and Heathcliff’s passions vibrate through their dress, their surroundings, and everything else within reach, and you leave the cinema quivering on their own private frequency. (Robbie Collin)
Four stars out of five from the BBC:
Emerald Fennell's Wuthering Heights is not very faithful to Emily Brontë's novel, but we knew that. [...]
Cathy and Heathcliff are still recognisably Brontë's lovers, irresistibly drawn to each other from childhood yet fated to be apart. But Fennell's approach is an extravagant swirl: sexy, dramatic, melodramatic, occasionally comic and often swoonily romantic. There is a lot of standing in the rain and wind, kissing in the rain and wind, and just rain and wind on the Yorkshire moors. She laces the 19th-Century setting with contemporary touches, from its costumes fit for an Oscar red carpet to its sexual frankness. A flesh-coloured wall is based on a scan of Robbie's skin, veins and all.  
But under it all Fennell channels something essential in the book – the corrosive behaviour that can result from thwarted desire. Jealousy, anger and vengeance are as natural to Cathy and Heathcliff as their endless passion for each other. If you embrace the film's audacious style and think of it as a reinvention not an adaptation, this bold, artful Wuthering Heights is utterly absorbing.
The film opens with a jolt of violence, invented by Fennell, that the young Cathy (Charlotte Mellington) watches with wide-eyed excitement. The screenplay combines some characters, invents backstories and lops off the second part of the book. Unlike Brontë's version of Cathy's kind father, this Mr Earnshaw (Martin Clunes) drunkenly rescues the abandoned boy Heathcliff (Owen Cooper of Adolescence), takes him back to their rustic home, Wuthering Heights, and brutishly treats him as a servant. The childhood scenes are bracing, but the film quickly moves on.
Robbie turns up in the first of many bright red-and-white dresses, and her performance is magnificent, making Cathy wild and selfish but with a conscience, and an innocence beneath her sense of entitlement. And forget her age. Fennell simply makes the characters older. Mr Earnshaw even says, "She's already well past spinsterhood". Elordi embodies Heathcliff's dashing, bad-boy energy, even when stuck with a stringy-haired wig. Heathcliff is more than a shirtless, sweaty hunk, although he is often that. Elordi reveals how defensive and easily wounded he is, how he resents his status as a servant. [...]
At times the film's over-the-top choices seem kitschy. Heathcliff rides on horseback against a bright orange sky, long hair flying in the wind as if he escaped from the cover of a romance novel. But overall Fennell uses stylised images well. After Heathcliff leaves, an overhead view shows Cathy slumped on the floor so that all we see is her billowing red skirt, her despair and grief revealed in a single shot. [...]
Alison Oliver gives a standout, lively performance as Isabella, Edgar's grown yet childish ward, who adores Cathy and creepily makes a doll with strands of Cathy's actual hair. (Caryn James)
Vulture really liked most aspects of the film:
Wuthering Heights is an incredibly moist movie, and that’s without even taking into account how often the characters get caught in or choose to stride out into the rain (all the better to make their outfits cling). A snail leaves a languid slime trail across a window pane, a housemaid squishes shiny dough provocatively between her fingers while making bread at the kitchen table, a scarred back is shown beaded with sweat in a loving close-up — Emerald Fennell’s take on the 1847 Emily Brontë novel practically glistens with fluids. [...]
Wuthering Heights is Fennell’s dumbest movie, and I say that with all admiration, because it also happens to be her best to date. Fennell has an incredible talent for the moment, for extravagant scenes that bypass all higher thought functions to spark a deeper lizard-brained pleasure, and for pop-music-scored montages of such lushness that they could levitate you right out of your seat. But thematic incisiveness has not proven to be her strong suit nor something her heart is in. Promising Young Woman, her directorial debut, got off to an electric start before eventually collapsing under the weight of its own attempts to delve into rage at a world that normalizes and trivializes rape. Saltburn was a collection of delirious imagery that featured some incoherent aspirations toward class commentary. In Wuthering Heights, she throws off the burden of trying to say something significant as one would a crushed velvet cloak when the sun’s finally come out. Fennell surveys Brontë’s saga of doomed passion, obsession, and multigenerational resentment and sums it up as the story of two incredibly messy bitches who can’t stay away from one another. That she’s onto something in terms of the work’s essence makes the smooth-brained sensuality of her third feature even better.
Like most Wuthering Heights adapters, Fennell sticks to the first volume of the book, focusing on the unshakeable bond that starts forming between Cathy and Heathcliff during their childhood together in the drafty farmhouse of the title, and that threatens to destroy them as they grow into adults separated by expectations surrounding their social status. But she streamlines things further, excising not just the complicated second generation of Earnshaws, Heathcliffs, and Lintons, but also the framing story, as well as the presence of Cathy’s older brother, Hindley. When the film begins, Cathy, played when young by Charlotte Mellington, lives with Nelly Dean (Vy Nguyen), who in this incarnation is the illegitimate daughter of an aristocrat who’s been hired as her companion, as well as a handful of servants and her mercurial, gambling- and alcohol-addicted father (Martin Clunes). When the Earnshaw patriarch impulsively saves an urchin (Adolescence’s Owen Cooper) from the streets of Liverpool and takes him in, he assigns the wide-eyed boy to Cathy, who provides him his name, as her “pet.” “I shall be very kind, unless you are bad, and then I will pinch you,” she informs him gleefully, and, to Heathcliff’s great misfortune, this worrying statement earns her his unending devotion.
Wuthering Heights has the tunnel-vision horniness and girlish aesthetic sensibility of a high-school freshman who’s been assigned to read Brontë in class while tearing through a pile of explicit bodice-rippers under the covers at home. For instance: Heathcliff at one point grabs Cathy by her corset in order to hoist her up one-handed to kiss her, which is the kind of logistically impossible move that feels lifted right out of a hormonally overheated daydream. Cathy is only ever in outfits that billow, whether that involves veils, dresses, or the full red skirts she starts wearing after marrying Edgar Linton (Shazad Latif), the wealthy bachelor next door who’s a more sensible match than the societally inappropriate Heathcliff. Heathcliff, after disappearing for years when Cathy spurns him for the other man, reemerges dramatically out of the mist as a fuckboy version of Mr. Darcy in riding boots, a cravat, a hoop earring, and gold tooth. Edgar’s luxurious estate, which he shares with his childlike ward, Isabella (Alison Oliver), has red lacquer floors and a fireplace formed out of dozens of plaster hands, and has as much in common with Lily Allen’s late Brooklyn brownstone as it does with anything period appropriate. Is this all delicious? It sure is, in the way that feels like it’s definitely going to make your stomach hurt afterward.
At the chiseled core of it all are Robbie and Elordi, but also Hong Chau, who plays the adult Nelly, and who accompanies Cathy in her move to the Linton household. Elordi — who, on the much-discussed spectrum of Heathcliff’s ethnic ambiguity, occupies the “white, but capable of tanning” side of the scale — understands the assignment best of all, though his is admittedly the easiest. His Heathcliff isn’t a character so much as he is the embodiment of a dozen conflicting, sometimes contradictory desires — a hulking brute who, especially in the beginning, is not that far off from the hot Frankenstein’s monster that nabbed the actor his first Oscar nomination, but who in other times is a wounded, sensitive soul tormented by longing, or a smirking, dominant seducer who appears to know everything the women he encounters want. Robbie is a little too gentle on Cathy, who can be imperious and vindictive, but only ever in ways that are meant to be understandable, because the movie needs her to be a martyr to this all-consuming connection that can’t be denied.
It’s Chau who, in a funny way, becomes an audience surrogate, watching this grand affair but also rolling her eyes and, increasingly, meddling impatiently in it, like someone who’s gotten tired of dealing with the endless cycle of makeups and breakups between two members of her friend group and just wishes they’d both move on already. In a movie that finds the idea of dying for love as romantic as living for it, she provides a necessary balance — not skeptical of the epic emotions the lovers feel, but a wry reminder of how tiresome it would be to have to live with two people so convinced of their main-character energy. (Alison Willmore)
IndieWire thinks that 'Emerald Fennell’s Loose, Lush Adaptation Will Enrage Literary Fans and Spark a Legion of New Devotees' giving it a B.
Trust that I write this sentence as a bona fide, BA-possessing member of the English-major-for-life crowd: No, you’re not going to see Cathy Linton, Hareton Earnshaw, or Linton Heathcliff in Emerald Fennell‘s loose adaptation of Emily Brontë’s classic novel “Wuthering Heights.” And no, you’re not going to miss them. Really.
That’s not to say that Fennell’s serious snipping of Brontë’s original material and her profound pruning of the Earnshaw and Linton family trees isn’t noticeable, but her devotion to the central relationship of Catherine Earnshaw and the mononymous Heathcliff makes for more than enough juicy material for the film‘s 136-minute running time. But if Fennell, who also wrote the film’s script, was bold enough to do away with more than half of its source material and at least nine of its major characters, why didn’t she go further? [...]
“Be more pervy,” my notes from the film’s screening include, and that’s a feeling that permeated the last 90 minutes of the film. If you’re going to go there, go there. If love is going to ruin these two, let’s ruin them. (A third act sequence with Elordi and standout co-star Alison Oliver does, however, go suitably wild, though none of it is built around being titillating in the slightest, but the level of ambition and to-hell-with-convention bent is sorely missed elsewhere.)
Instead, however, Fennell chooses to divert that energy to more traditional themes and tones: love ruins Cathy and Heathcliff and just about everyone around them, and keeping them apart is such a toxic endeavor that it batters the sanity, logic, and reason of anyone who comes in contact with them. Edgar, Isabella, Nelly (Hong Chau, the film’s quiet, rage-filled center), they all suffer too. And why not? This story is set in a gruesome, violent, vile world. Hell, the whole thing opens with a public hanging, one attended by both a young Heathcliff (“Adolescence” breakout Owen Cooper) and a positively overjoyed Cathy (Charlotte Mellington). [...]
In one of the film’s most evocative montages (in a film that leans far too hard on them), we watch Cathy spin through entire years at the Linton family estate, Thrushcross Grange, a mash-up of Barbie Dream House and Alice’s Wonderland, pink and big-skirted and high-haired and bubbly and be-ribboned and just so, so wrong. If she’s trying to distract herself from the loss of Heathcliff, the spectacular sequence works a trick, for both Cathy and the audience. [...]
Fennell and Sandgren’s compositions are frequently awe-inspiring, from a sequence that sees Cathy sweeping across the moors in her wedding dress to the eventual foggy reunion between the lovers that slowly pulls Elordi into relief while a searching Cathy searches for clarity. It looks stunning, even when it turns oddly stagy and confined (the Earnshaw family home looks like a set, and while that might be the point, that intention seems out of place in this otherwise richly made world).
Clocking in at over two hours, there’s no lack of dazzling design and insane ideas to keep every minute of Fennell’s feature thrilling to watch. As with all of Fennell’s films, boredom is never on offer. And yet, that doesn’t entirely dissipate the feeling that something is still missing here. By cutting so much of Brontë’s sprawling novel down to the quick, by focusing so squarely on just Cathy and Heathcliff, we’re trapped only in the immediacy of their doomed affection, which is never allowed to be hot enough to make the entire effort come together, let alone come undone. (Kate Erbland)
USA Today gives it 3.5 stars out of four.
Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” is stellar sensory overload with ostentatious costumes and production design, which interestingly leans into rich people being totally weird. (Edgar outfits Cathy’s bedroom with walls made to look like her skin, complete with veins and moles.) The movie also offers a bunch of original Charli XCX tunes, spawning a soundtrack much better than the singer’s own lackluster mockumentary.
It's the director’s filmmaking, though, that's striking, showing new depth from the woman who made the delicious “Promising Young Woman” and out-there “Saltburn.” She uses misty English moors and oncoming lightning storms to symbolize the broody, electric couple and their complicated emotions. And Fennell fashions visual callbacks to hauntingly reflect Cathy and Heathcliff’s childhood in their adult lives, a nod to their arrested development but also the kind of naive, tight-knit bond only children can have. 
Fennell has gone so far with Brontë’s beloved book that there’s bound to be discourse, whether it’s Heathcliff's mysterious ethnicity (he’s described as a “dark-skinned gipsy” in the novel) or him and Cathy being aged up from teens. But you can’t argue with Robbie and Elordi's chemistry when it comes to exuding love, hate and everything in between.
Cathy can be selfish and maddening, Heathcliff is both aloof and dastardly, yet they’re never unlikable. And while their steamy, sweaty dalliances are hot and heavy (albeit mostly clothed), most swoonworthy are the smaller moments, like Heathcliff gently cupping his hands to keep the rain out of Cathy’s eyes.
Hong Chau is a great choice for the adult Nelly, a quietly resentful sort who causes more friction in Cathy and Heathcliff's tempestuous situation. Latif lends an inherent goodness to Edgar that makes him a foil for Heathcliff but also a better man for Cathy. Cooper, an Emmy winner for “Adolescence,” is just as important as Elordi for their character’s arc. However, the one supporting player you might obsess over is Oliver, enchantingly eccentric as a sexually repressed innocent embroiled in Heathcliff’s revenge quest.
With flair and bombast to spare, Fennell reaches such great “Heights” that this feels like the first must-see movie of 2026, an enthralling retelling of an all-time love story through an accessibly modern lens. (Brian Truitt)
To situate it in terms of Emily Brontë’s sister Charlotte, Fennell’s approach feels more “Wide Sargasso Sea” than “Jane Eyre”: sophisticated fan fiction that revels in heaving bosoms, damp flesh and kinky sex (just not between Catherine and Heathcliff). There have been more than enough polite, repressive tellings of the classic Romantic novel, which centers on a young woman raised on the Yorkshire moors who betrays her heart — fearing ruin, she chooses the financial stability of a comfortable marriage over her wild-willed soulmate — and suffers for it in the long run. [...]
Of all the visual flourishes Fennell allows herself, Heathcliff’s departure is the most striking: She frames Elordi, bearded and betrayed, in silhouette against a deep crimson sky. He appears at once shattered and defiant, like Scarlett O’Hara just before intermission in “Gone With the Wind.” It’s ridiculously overripe, but exquisite, the sort of indulgence that sets some viewers vibrating and others rolling their eyes. It’s also the clearest clue yet to Fennell’s operatic interpretation of the material, which finds its musical equivalent in Anthony Willis’ score and a handful of tortured-love songs from Charli xcx (of which “Chains of Love” most closely nails the film’s sadomasochistic subtext).
Ratcheted up to such heights, “Wuthering” risks smothering those whom “Saltburn” struck as too much. And yet, this is what a generation of moviegoers thrilled by the stylistic excess of A24 and Neon movies want from the big-screen experience. As in the scene where Nelly tightens Catherine’s corset till it nearly snaps her ribs, the movie is meant to evoke extreme sensations. For nearly two centuries, Brontë’s book has been a romantic fantasy for readers. Fennell treats it as an erotic one as well, leaning into all that is sensual: a bed full of broken eggs, a stable tryst involving whips and bridles, Catherine pleasuring herself en plein air. The list goes on.
Fennell ditches the back half of the book (pretty much everything that happens after a key character’s death), while reading a great deal of unspoken desire between the lines. The ultimate bad boy of Victorian literature, Heathcliff comes across less devilish here than he does in Brontë’s book, though there’s a deliciously naughty streak to the way he seeks revenge on Catherine, asking consent from Linton’s sister Isabella (Alison Oliver) to use her for this very purpose. It’s fascinating to see Elordi play this monstrous brute so soon after embodying Frankenstein’s creation, and surprising that there’s less flesh on display here, but no fewer scars.
Heathcliff needs no redeeming — his roguishness is half the appeal — and yet, Robbie’s emboldened Catherine assumes more responsibility for the couple’s unhappiness … and also more complicity in exploring what might have been. The trouble with letting these two to satisfy their lust is that it defuses the very dynamic that has gone so long unrequited.
After “Saltburn,” which climaxed with one character scandalously making love to another’s grave, Fennell had to shock us somehow. Instead of repeating herself (or earlier adaptations), the director cuts short the pair’s pleasure. But not ours. (Peter Debruge)
Den of Geek thinks that the film is a "Bastardization of Brontë" but "Still Makes for Bodice-Ripping Delight":
Fennell’s lurid and dramatic reimagining of Emily Brontë’s literary classic is similarly stormy, aggressive, and distracted with kink. And its biggest turn-ons would seem to be the kind of lush excesses associated with studio melodramas of yesteryear.  (...)
This is not the Victorian England in which the Brontës lived, nor the feel-good fairytale land of modern streaming service bodice-rippers, which gloss the genre over with a veneer as hot as a season’s greetings card from Hallmark. Nay, Fennell’s Wuthering Heights lives in a seething, ancient decrepit place that only existed in the movies of yore, and in its best moments she transports viewers back to the kind of sweeping spectacle that can beguile and enrapture. (...)
Fennell’s Wuthering Heights is less an adaptation of the novel than it is a lascivious daydream of what every young, repressed non-reader imagines when staring up at its stylized title on a dorm room wall, or while listening to the spooky synths of Kate Bush crooning about running along ‘em moors. It is Fifty Shades of Technicolor Rouge, wherein each fetid desire, and implicit moral corruption that’s simply suggested on the page, is made achingly, swooningly vivid in a movie that jettisons the multigenerational degradation and even supernatural underpinnings of the book in favor of an epically bad romance. (...)
Despite warping and drastically reducing the scope of the story, it still feels too vast and unwieldy for Fennell to firmly get her arms around. That probably won’t matter though to most audiences, including ultimately myself. The filmmaker has such command of the tone and vibe she seeks that it is easy to become drunk on the sheer beauty of her and Sandgren’s cavernous compositions in the dilapidated ruins of Wuthering Heights’ carriage house. Sunlight steals through a hundred cracks in the ceiling, creating an unlikely halo around Heathcliff and Cathy, even in moments of exquisite damnation. (David Crow)
The Atlantic thinks the film  "captures the story’s grotesque beauty":
Wuthering Heights, the writer-director Emerald Fennell’s new adaptation of Emily Brontë’s groundbreaking Gothic novel, is her best film to date—a heaving, rip-snortingly carnal good time at the cinema. It is also a gooey, grimy mess. The camera lingers on dripping egg yolks and squishy, bubbling dough; the protagonist, Cathy Earnshaw (played by Margot Robbie), must wade through pig’s blood on her way to the moors near her home, leaving a trim of viscera on her gorgeously anachronistic dress. This is Fennell’s aesthetic throughout: loudly stylish on top, and just as loudly nasty right below the surface.
The clash of beauty and filth is well-suited for Brontë’s desolate tale of romance in a tempestuous climate, where Cathy is constantly caught between Victorian propriety and her baser, wilder nature. Fennell’s take is thuddingly blunt; it brings the book’s simmering sexual repression to a boil. Wuthering Heights, sprawling and objectively tough to capture faithfully, hinges on the unbalanced, teenage energy of its central relationship—here, expressed through glossy, MTV-esque visuals that the director deploys with aplomb. (...)
Robbie and Elordi’s chemistry is strong, and both are major Hollywood talents who can smirk, scream, and sob with the best of them. The gleeful visuals and sounds, however, are what really propel the movie along. There are ravishing songs by the pop star Charli XCX, surprisingly none of them too out of place; some truly ridiculous costume choices for Cathy as she embraces Edgar’s hoity-toity life; and all of that goo, blood, and viscera. (...)
The story’s dreamy and at times ludicrous emotional landscape often struggles on more realistic grounding. In 2011, the great director Andrea Arnold attempted a version of Wuthering Heights with a much more muted, credible tone, even casting a mixed-race actor in the role of Heathcliff (in the book, his ethnic background is pointedly ambiguous). Although Arnold’s attempt was interesting, it felt flat, bereft of Brontë’s eccentric flourishes. Fennell has streamlined the book’s narrative, yes, but not its white-hot melodramatic core—and she understands it well enough to create a worthy swoon-fest for the ages. (David Sims)
New York Sun (3 and a half stars out of 4):
Teachers won’t be playing this movie in English Lit class anytime soon.
Not unless their kink is angry emails.
For one, Emerald Fennell’s R-rated “Wuthering Heights” has a healthy amount of sex scenes — far more, anyway, than the novel’s zero.
And that’s not the only bold departure from the Victorian-Era source material.
If high school students were to watch the film starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi to study for final exams, they’d have to repeat sophomore year. Fennell’s telling deviates from Emily Brontë’s 1847 book with abandon. 
Plotlines get changed or chopped, the cast of characters has been streamlined to less than 10, the costumes are as period-accurate to the 19th century as a Honda Accord and there is a song by Charli xcx.
You know what? That’s great. Have at it. “Wuthering Heights” is 179 years old and much too complicated a story — both psychologically and structurally — to faithfully adapt on-screen into anything resembling a good time. (...)
Traditionalists will moan that Fennell has turned Brontë’s book into a sweeping romance. And, yes, she has. Music swells, tears flow, faces are perfect.
But what makes the movie so enthralling is that she hits on a powerful tug-of-war: We root hard for Heathcliff and Cathy, even though we know full well we shouldn’t. (Johnny Oleksinski)
The Mary Sue gives three and a half stars out of five:
Sometimes, you watch a film and wish the creative just decided to make an original film and that’s where I’m at with Wuthering Heights. The Emerald Fennell adaptation feels less like Emily Brontë’s work and more like a fanfiction take on Heathcliff and Catherine. (...)
There is something truly captivating about this adaptation of “Wuthering Heights.” The lack of care over the period put me at a weird sense of ease. I knew that this wasn’t going to be a “textbook” adaptation and for the most part, I was fine with that and along for the ride. But there is also a glaring issue through this adaptation of Brontë’s most famous work. (...)
Whenever I think on Wuthering Heights, I am conflicted. I do think that Fennell made an absolutely breathtaking film. But it is barely an adaptation. It is essentially someone’s thoughts on Wuthering Heights if they read it once and forgot a lot of the important beats of it. Which is why, prior to seeing it, I thought it was going to be a woman’s “idea” of Wuthering Heights. And in a way, it is. But it leans more towards an actual adaptation than something different. (Rachel Leishman)
Screencrush gives the film a 7 out of 10:
Removed from its source material (at least in the mind of this one particular ignoramus), Fennel’s Wuthering Heights is a striking, sensual movie filled with big gestures and bold stylistic choices. No one in Wuthering Heights, either in front of the camera or behind it, does anything halfway. The colors are vibrant, the costumes are extravagant, the music swells and roars, and stars Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi tear at each other’s clothing and suck on each other’s faces (and, occasionally, move tastefully in the vicinity of other body parts). (...)
[The film] looks and sounds fantastic, peppers its torrid love story with a few moments of absurd humor — did I mention the veiny, fleshy wallpaper? — and carries itself with the assured confidence of its Byronic hero. (I’m a philistine, but I’m not a dummy.) (Matt Singer)
Empire (3 of 5):
There is notably more plot to Brontë’s novel than in Fennell’s reimagining, and while the film doesn’t need a denser narrative, it could benefit from feeling more grounded — especially when Cathy and Heathcliff fight and fornicate like teenagers, ricocheting between lust and loathing. “I hated you, I loved you, too” is all well and good, but here the stakes become more subdued as style takes over. The film is undeniably expertly crafted, and Fennell — who has quickly risen to become one of Britain’s buzziest Hollywood exports — has certainly stepped up as a filmmaker in terms of scope. But had Wuthering Heights stayed closer to earth, the weight of this tragic romance would hit harder.
Fennell throws everything at this fever-dream adaptation, which massages the senses while showcasing Elordi’s ever-growing star power. If only its electrically erotic energy was sustained to the end. (Beth Webb)
Esquire centers the review on Margot Robbie and thinks that the film 'defies expectations':
I am pleased to report that Robbie, and there shouldn’t really be any doubts given her priors, overcomes any preconceptions about her beachy breeziness and supercharges Catherine. It is a total thrill. (...)
Fennell knows what she is doing, and while Brontë purists may gasp, it is a lot of fun. And not totally off the mark. If any figure from history can understand the power of transformation, longing for feeling and being subject to the whims of others, it is Barbara Millicent Roberts. (Henry Wong)
 Is it faithful? Not particularly. Is it memorable? Absolutely. Fennell’s adaptation may divide audiences, but it pulses with a boldness and cinematic confidence that make it difficult to ignore. For viewers willing to embrace a stylised, modernised interpretation rather than a traditional period drama, this Wuthering Heights offers a lurid, provocative and strangely compelling ride, one that captures the novel’s ferocious emotional core, even as it rewrites the rules completely. (Linda Marric)
There is no denying that “Wuthering Heights” will inspire fierce debate. But there is also no denying its craft, ambition, and emotional conviction. Emerald Fennell has created something audacious, seductive, and deeply personal. Supported by spellbinding cinematography, sumptuous design, and led by two fearless lead performances that go for broke, this version of “Wuthering Heights” may come to define a new era of romantic filmgoers. Dirty and overlong as it may be, it is also mesmerizing and at times, yes, even moving. For those who like their emotions, romance, and cinema big, this is a swooning, breathless experience that will satisfy those desires while leaving you yearning for more. Against all better judgment, the romantic in me fell hard for it. (Matt Neglia)
The lukewarm ones:

This is not your Penguin Classics school curriculum edition. [...]
Fennell’s overhaul flirts with insanity, and if you can let go of preconceived notions about how this story should be told, it’s arguably the writer-director’s most purely entertaining film — pulpy, provocative, drenched in blazing color and opulent design, laced with anachronistic flourishes, sexy, pervy, irreverent and resonantly tragic. Often teetering on the verge between silly and clever, it’s Wuthering Heights for the Bridgerton generation, guaranteed to moisten tear ducts and inflame young hearts. [...]
Mr. Earnshaw is capricious — jolly one minute, enraged the next — and Cathy to some degree shares that unpredictable nature. “This’ll be your pet,” her father tells her of Heathcliff, and she takes an instant liking to him. But Cathy can also be cruelly insensitive, notably to her bookish companion Nelly (Hong Chau), the illegitimate daughter of a Lord who paid to have her hidden away. It’s Heathcliff who tells Cathy, “I will never leave you, no matter what you do.” But that vow could just as easily apply to Nelly. [...]
Robbie tackles Cathy’s complexity head on; she’s driven as much by carnal as emotional needs and not averse to the pleasure of power games, at times bordering on sadism. When Heathcliff says he would take any number of beatings to spare her, the faintest trace of a smile on her face speaks volumes.
Fennell knows exactly what she’s doing, creating thirst-trap meme fodder with a shot of smoldering Elordi, I mean Heathcliff, shirtless and sweaty, stacking hay bales. The moment is so close to gay farmer porn I giggled. [...]
There’s a melodramatic grandiosity to much of this, a touch of the overwrought, which you either go with or you don’t. I found it fun, not gonna lie. Fennell shuffles her English lit influences — either by accident or by design — with some scenes playing more like Austen or Dickens. But whatever its flaws or virtues, this movie seems to know exactly what its core audience wants and delivers it with the intensity of tempestuous winds and torrential downpours.
There’s nothing timid or stiflingly tasteful about Fennell’s direction — though there’s nothing terribly fluid about it either. The visual scheme is rooted in the period but flirts with modern times — from Linus Sandgren’s spectacular cinematography through Suzie Davis’ sumptuous production design and Jacqueline Durran’s over-the-top fantasy costumes in eye-searing reds and metallics. And Anthony Willis’ score, intertwined with original songs by Charli xcx, effectively pumps up the romance and the tragedy. [...]
Either way, the leads are captivating and their chemistry sizzles. Robbie (a producer here, as well as on Fennell’s previous films Promising Young Woman and Saltburn) is in full bloom, walking a tightrope between infuriating recklessness and devastating regret. Often, she seems more like Katherina from The Taming of the Shrew than Catherine Earnshaw. But Elordi (the second lead in Saltburn) inarguably is the standout. Even after showing the monstrousness of which Heathcliff is capable, he ensures we still see a broken heartthrob driven by love and madness into the abyss.
Clunes, Oliver and the quietly affecting Latif all nail their characters with brushstrokes ranging from broad to finely detailed. But as is so often the case, it’s Chau who steals every scene, using her character’s stillness and alert gaze to great effect. Like Heathcliff, Nelly is forever stained by the stigma of class, stoking ambiguity as to whether her loyalty to Cathy is forged in love or hate. Conflicted feelings like those might well represent how many people respond to Fennell’s movie. (David Rooney)
Three stars out of five from Financial Times (it contains a pearl, though: "The S&M [of the film is] more M&S":
Fennell brings out the big guns to snap us back to life. With adulthood come Robbie and Elordi. The reek of animal attraction is strong. “I can smell you from here,” Cathy tells Heathcliff. Going full Yorkshire, Elordi flattens his vowels to make brusque double entendres. 
By now, Fennell’s vision is getting tonally crowded. As the sexual tension cranks, the mood feels like an arthouse Carry On, with lingering shots of gloopy egg whites. The rest of the movie grabs the attention so hard, Charli XCX does the soundtrack and you don’t even notice. [...]
You may tire, though, of the movie’s urge to constantly give us new things to gawp at — or perhaps give them to TikTok, which helped make Saltburn a viral hit. The films creaks under the far-out costumes, jewelled anachronisms, strawberries as big as your head, crimson floors polished to a liquid shine. 
You would think the point is meant to be how vapid it all seems besides the returning Heathcliff. If so, the scales are out of whack. Next to the hats and furniture, the much-vaunted trysts between Robbie and Elordi feel quick and cursory. Sorry people, but the kink proves mostly straitlaced, the S&M more M&S. [...]
As in Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, the male lead is asked to bring real emotion to a movie bloated with artifice. But this Heathcliff would be hard work for even the most nimble actor, which Elordi may or may not be. Whatever the flavour of past Wuthering Heights, the character is a danger — a wild man. Here, he has the sad eyes of a Labradoodle locked out of the front room. 
Robbie too might come to question her work here. Cathy’s long stint as a dress-up doll sees her frozen in place, and the star spends a lot of the film looking a little glazed and uncertain. Maybe that just comes with the job — the look of a woman trapped in someone else’s quotation marks. (Danny Leigh)
Also, three stars out of five from The Irish Times:
Literal and figurative storms accompany his eventual moneyed return. Now in the starry form of Margot Robbie, often dressed, inexplicably, like an Alpine milkmaid, and Jacob Elordi, a caber of landscape made flesh, the couple spread bottomless misery wherever their blustery passion touches down. [...]
Fennell, who has already had a crack at interclass amour fou with Saltburn, makes her distinctive presence felt in the knowingly vulgar – somewhat inconsistent – visuals and in a clash of cheeky anachronisms that keep the soundtrack on awkward edge: Charli XCX’s smart beats rubbing against the folk singer Olivia Chaney’s lovely version of The Dark-Eyed Sailor.
The nightmarishly heightened contrast between the horrors of Wuthering Heights (pyramids of bottles stacked near tiling that suggests Derek Jarman’s work for the Russell film The Devils) and the stifling civilisation of the Lintons’ Thrushcross Grange (think Austen pimped up for a themed Las Vegas casino) will surely secure the film’s production designer, Suzie Davies, awards in a year’s time.
The supporting cast are flawless in their dedication to an aesthetic that heightens the poisonous chemistry at the heart of the core relationship. Clunes is magnificently doomed as the Earnshaws’ thirsty pater familias. Alison Oliver, from Cork, is better still as a character often undersold in adaptations. Her Isabella Linton is first encountered as a hilarious Cathy superfan – she’d be drooling over her every Insta post in 2026 – before becoming disturbingly compliant in Heathcliff’s literal enslavement of her.
The problem – and it is no small one – rests with the leads. Elordi is fine as an unthinking hunk of abusive resentment. But the script cannot make sense of this Cathy as someone of Robbie’s age. At least one sarky crack confirms the character is no longer supposed to be a teenager (or anything close), but the dialogue does not satisfactorily retune Cathy to a woman in her 30s.
It would have been a nice trick to pull off, because, much rubbished by those who haven’t seen it, “Wuthering Heights”, is, elsewhere, successful at nodding politely to the original text while snubbing its nose at slavish faithfulness. The wallowing in sexually suggestive egg yolk. The hilariously phallic architecture. Oliver chained to the fireplace. Better that than another politely reverent variation on Sunday-evening telly. (Donald Clarke)
Two stars out of four from Roger Ebert:
It’s a dare, and an invitation to experience all the ways Fennell herself felt the arousing sway of the classic, where she sees lust and demise as two inseparable sides of the same coin, if her opening is any indication.
After this powerful proposition, it is unfortunate that the film that follows becomes an increasingly timid affair, with a series of aggressively styled set pieces and, inexplicably, even oppressively hushed emotions. [...]
Instead of an effervescently out-there emotional scope, she gives us something halfway, intriguingly sizzling when yearning takes center stage between Robbie and Elordi, two of the greatest actors working today, but oddly cold and even wooden when the duo finally falls into each other’s arms. It brings me no pleasure to say that the rain-soaked kiss scene in the trailer (“let us both be damned”) is perhaps the most believably sensual intimacy scene in the movie—elsewhere, there are several shy and lifeless ones. And it’s curious that the leads’ intense chemistry lands mostly when they are lust-filled yet apart by circumstance. This seems to have less to do with Robbie and Elordi, but more with Fennell’s style-over-substance approach to the material. [...]  It’s hard to feel free when you are constantly and loudly reminded by every aspect of the movie that you are supposed to feel things. [...]
The strongest segment of Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” is its first chapter, when we are introduced to the world of young Catherine and Heathcliff (Charlotte Mellington and Owen Cooper of “Adolescence”). [...]
Matched perfectly in their volatility, the two grow up causing trouble, having fun over the expansive and foggy Yorkshire moors, and misbehaving, with Heathcliff often taking the blame for Cathy’s wrongdoings. Meanwhile, there is also the housekeeper Nelly (played by the great Hong Chau, with Vy Nguyen in a younger role). One of the book’s main narrators, she is defined here more by her silent observations as Cathy’s lifelong friend and companion, derailing a possible romance between Cathy and Heathcliff. A deeply emotive performer, Chau is absolutely perfect in the part—so much so that you increasingly wish Fennell’s adaptation allowed her character a crescendo or two. [...]
sister Isabella (a scene-stealing Alison Oliver) [...]
On paper, the stakes couldn’t be higher. But in Fennell’s hands, the all-consuming nature of the world feels softened, even flattened. Then again, maybe it is just crushed under the production design and costuming choices, often eye-popping in all the wrong ways. There is something too tidy and uninteresting about the great majority of Robbie’s garments during Cathy’s Thrushcross Grange years. The problem isn’t the contemporary liberties the costuming takes with the Georgian era of the story—period inaccuracy in aesthetics can be a wonderful creative asset in film—but the taste level.
There are some inspired pieces, like Cathy’s lush wedding gown, and a richly draped black frock that Linus Sandgren’s high-contrast lensing casts in white light. But for the most part, the costuming reminded this critic of the standard-issue Barbie doll gowns she used to collect in her dollhouse. (Peerless costume designer Jacqueline Durran dressed Robbie in “Barbie” too.) And Suzie Davies’ production design explores several interesting concepts, but many of them don’t blend into the story’s Gothic hues. Cathy’s pink Thrushcross Grange room feels almost comically bare, going against the visual excess we yearn for in these types of melodramas. And the wall dressings that are supposed to represent Cathy’s freckled skin are certainly an idea, but whether it’s a good one is debatable. Elsewhere, the location (shot actually in Yorkshire) and Sandgren’s cinematography of high contrasts, deep reds, and fog—lots of fog—feel cinematic enough. Though the whole thing feels like an artificial music video, rather than an inviting fantastical world we want to get lost in. Charli xcx’s admittedly beautiful (but ultimately distracting) songs and musical cues further this feeling.
Fennell is a bold filmmaker unafraid to try something new and unexpected. And “Wuthering Heights” deserves some recognition for being a movie that she made entirely on her own terms. If only those terms ignited the riotous feelings that we were promised. (Tomris Laffly)
Two stars out of four from Slant:
Key to understanding what you’re getting from Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights is recognizing how intentional those scare quotes around the title on the poster actually are. This take on Emily Brontë’s Gothic novel is less an adaptation of the story as it exists on the page than of how it haunts our cultural memory. That is, not as a tale of generational trauma and doomed obsession, but as a kinky, heavily stylized, bodice-ripping romance that provides Fennell a canvas on which to flaunt her aesthetic and thematic intentions. Like a particularly impressive aspic, Wuthering Heights is tantalizing to behold but not so easy to swallow. [...]
The film’s world is a tactile feast of goopy eroticized forms and textures from runny eggs to sticky mounds of dough to literal snail trails glistening across windowpanes. This rooting around in prurience befits an adaptation that has little interest in respecting its iconic source material, given how it underlines things that Brontë only alludes to.
Here, the characters proclaim loudly what they left unsaid on the page, and Cathy and Heathcliff consummate their love for one another many times cover. Midway through the film, when Cathy utters, “It would degrade me to marry Heathcliff,” it’s hard how to imagine how that could possibly be the case. Robbie is faintly ridiculous as the incorrigible Cathy, pulling faces in the film’s early going like a clumsy rom-com heroine, but she comports herself far better playing Cathy as a wilting flower as the story lumbers toward its tragic conclusion. [...]
Fennell has been criticized for the casting of Elordi as another example of whitewashing a character for whom there’s contemporary scholarship to suggest may be non-white, yet the filmmaker’s total disinterest in Heathcliff’s interiority and the conditions that mark him as a marginalized other, at least in this case, serve to make his race immaterial. This is notable, as most screen versions of Wuthering Heights align themselves with Heathcliff’s outsider perspective, but Fennell’s adaptation is Cathy’s show. More interesting still, Elordi’s take on the famously feral and villainous antihero is more kicked puppy than mad dog, and Fennell saves her ire for the woman on which she centers the story.
The film delights in seeing women corseted, bridled, crawling like beasts or with masculine hands placed over their faces. Fennell seems to be prodding us with the imagery of erotic submission that was once the purview of Harlequin romances but has now gone mainstream in the wake of Fifty Shades of Grey and the dawn of BookTok. But there’s also a timeless, confessional quality to her overheated assertion that as much as women desire kindness, comfort, and fancy things, they also yearn to feel the rough hands of men with gold teeth.
Yet the film’s flirtations with a deeper rumination on the lot of women who feel they have to choose wealth and status in a world that devalues, dehumanizes, and objectifies them are basically just foreplay. (A room papered in the plush pinks of Cathy’s skin, complete with birthmarks and blue veins, is a recurrent image in search of a thesis.) Fennell stops short of offering a truly penetrating message, turning Cathy’s desire for Linton into a clear-cut decision between love and vanity. Ultimately, Cathy rejects Heathcliff because she’s selfish and materialistic, not because she’s a 19th-century woman with limited prospects.
The way Fennell seemingly sees it, patriarchy is an annoyance, racial difference as a distraction, and love is simply a matter of choice. As for wealth, it’s the most suffocating of prisons. That’s a message that’s hard to take seriously in our current socio-historical moment, and doubly so given how Fennell is enamored with that particular cage and how it sparkles. (Rocco T. Thompson)
Associated Press thinks is "bold but shallow" (two stars out of four): 
Fennell reduces her story to a more simplistic narrative about hate and its polluting ripple effects. (...)
In these sex-deprived times at the cinema, if some corset kink, power games and smoldering star power from two genetically blessed Australians is what you’re looking for, “Wuthering Heights” might just satisfy that big-screen itch. There are myriad pleasures to be had in the bold, absurd pageantry and devilish scheming. Alison Oliver’s comic timing as the naive, skittish Isabella Linton is a particular delight. With the right crowd, it could make for a fun night out at the movies.
Yet for all the big swings, Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” amounts to something oddly shallow and blunt: garish and stylized fan fiction with the scope and budget of an old-school Hollywood epic. (...)
There is also a conscious artificiality to the film, especially at the Grange. Costume designer Jacqueline Durran was beholden to no specific period and drew on all manner of inspiration to create the looks, including 1950s soundstage melodramas. The set design is a little absurd too — Catherine’s bedroom has been painted to match her skin color (moles and veins and all). It’s not uninteresting to look at, but as a storytelling aid, the surreal, pop art choices are often more distracting than additive. (...)
Fennell clearly has so many ideas swirling around, which is fitting for a story like “Wuthering Heights.” And yet as a viewing experience, it is an undernourishing feast, neither dangerous nor hot enough. (Lindsey Bahr)
As a take on "Wuthering Heights," Fennell's approach to the thematically rich text leaves much to be desired, but as cinematic retelling of a 14-year-old's fanfic interpretation of a forbidden romance — it's breathtaking. The production ingredients and performances in "Wuthering Heights" are spectacular, but if the audience needs to essentially throw out the book entirely in order to enjoy the movie, why pretend it's an adaptation at all? (...)
The look of "Wuthering Heights" is so stunning and so striking that it makes the thematic shortcomings all the more frustrating. It turns the film into a "great gowns, beautiful gowns" adaptation, overshadowing the gorgeous albeit impractical accomplishments on screen. (...)
The one person who truly matches Emerald Fennell's freak in "Wuthering Heights," however, is Alison Oliver as Isabella. In what is perhaps the most interesting departure from the source material, Isabella is reimagined from a victim of Heathcliff's rage and abuse into a young woman seduced by the chance to be a live-in submissive pet. (...)
This is not an adaptation of "Wuthering Heights," but the result of what happens when you're playing an approximation "Wuthering Heights" without a full grasp on the material but all the money in the world to bring your questionable imagination to life. (BJ Colangelo)
 Emerald Fennell’s Stylish Spin on the Classic Novel is More Bodice Ripper Than Brontë Gripper. (...)
Still, somehow, through its beautiful yet garish visuals and its specific intensity, “Wuthering Heights” should evoke a passionate response, especially from viewers unfamiliar with the story. But for fans of the book who can imagine what could have been, it may drive you mad. (Sophia Ciminello)
The Sun summarizes Emerald Fennell's approach as "sex over substance" (3 out of 5 stars):
This wild reimagining of Emily Bronte’s novel seems to have replaced huge chunks of her classic with pages from a Mills & Boon, a couple of chapters from Alice In Wonderland and pictures from an S&M catalogue. (...)
Like a latex-covered daydream of every schoolgirl forced to read the 1847 book, the film sees class-crossed lovers Cathy and Heathcliff romp their way towards disaster, in place of the sexless rom-zero-com Brontë wrote. (...)
This over-stylised drama is fierce and fun — but unfortunately it is also sex over substance. (Dulcie Pearce)
Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi sizzle, but Wuthering Heights isn't quite the full Brontë. (...)
 True to her word, the writer-director's Wuthering Heights — sorry, "Wuthering Heights" — is the kind of fanfic fever dream that feels ripped from the cover of some lurid pulp imprint, full of Gothic spires, crashing thunder, strained bodices and torrid coupling. (...)
As magnetic as Elordi and Robbie are as performers, no amount of steamy montages can quite convince us that they're souls entwined in the cosmos, the kind of supernatural pairing whose whims seemed to command the elements — one of the reasons Kate Bush's Wuthering Heights remains undefeated as the greatest adaptation of the novel; a feat it achieves in all of four minutes and 29 seconds.
Still, Fennell's Wuthering Heights is most definitely her own, and if you want to see Jacob Elordi hoisting up Margot Robbie by the bodice with one hand — and let's face it, who doesn't — her lurid, lusty adaptation may well satisfy your Valentine's Day craving. Hooting and hollering at this hot mess is all part of the fun. (Luke Goodsell)
CaseyMovieMania (2,5 stars out of 5):
Visually, “Wuthering Heights” is top-notch. Fennell has a good eye for a mesmerising visual palette with the help of Linus Sandgren’s atmospheric cinematography. Both production and costume designs are exquisite, namely Cathy’s ethereal white bridal gown, looking like it comes alive straight out of a fashion magazine. Too bad Fennell’s eclectic styles can only do so much, even with the additional worthwhile moments coming from Robbie, Elordi, along with the supporting players. (...)
It doesn’t help either when the movie tends to overstay its welcome with a punishing 136-minute runtime, which could have used some tightening on the bodice (read: editing). Given the massive hype and expectations surrounding “Wuthering Heights”, it’s a pity Fennell’s highly anticipated romantic drama comes across as a missed opportunity. 
The bad ones:

Two stars out of five from The Times:
Who knew Isabella Linton was the best character in Wuthering Heights? She is in this vapid Brontë adaptation, anyway, a film that is enlivened briefly whenever she appears on screen, wickedly played by Alison Oliver. Otherwise, with a chemistry-free central romance between the bizarrely uninteresting Heathcliff (Jacob Elordi) and Cathy (Margot Robbie, also the film’s producer), this film self-deflates. [...]
Back to Isabella, though, who is the heiress of the swanky Yorkshire mansion Thrushcross Grange and an enthusiast of BDSM practices that include canine-themed submission and stuff with chains. This is, obviously, a striking departure from the novel, yet appropriate for an adaptation that arrives with ironic quotation marks around the title. Literary pedants be warned: there is maybe 10 to 15 per cent of the original narrative in the movie, while the rest belongs to Fennell’s reimagined and self-described “fever dream”. It is, at best, Brontë adjacent but with a naff dollop of the Fifty Shades of Grey author EL James. [...]
Yes, there is no person or inanimate object safe in a film where Fennell’s main directorial note to Elordi seems to have been, “Great, but can you also lick it?” And so with titter-inducing idiocy this Heathcliff “erotically” licks the wallpaper in Cathy’s bedroom, he licks her cheek when she’s attempting to cry and, worst of all, in a sequence that’s pure David Attenborough, he licks the length of her neck like a gecko working diligently through a string of dried crickets. This, remember, is a character who once dug his dead lover out of the ground with his bare hands (sorry, in the book, not in the film) but here commands only an egregious loss of credibility.
Cathy isn’t much better. Robbie is 35 and her age might have been an insurmountable issue had this been a good-faith adaptation (the literary Cathy is a teenager). But here it’s only mildly perplexing, prompting questions about why Cathy only began flirting with Heathcliff in her thirties. 
More importantly, Robbie is an imposing actress and her costumes, from the designer Jacqueline Durran, are impressive. But her Cathy lives entirely on the surface like Brontë Barbie and never burns from the core like, say, the Cathy of Merle Oberon (from the 1939 version), or like Emma Mackey in the brilliant Emily (2022), there playing Emily Brontë but simultaneously, and this is the point, playing Cathy.
The rest of the film is equally imprecise. The production design is ramshackle — a bit of brutalism here, a bit of Tim Burton there, some location shooting and lots of ugly CGI. And the ending is hobbled by a shamefully trite “best bits” megamix.
Still, Oliver’s Isabella is a hoot and a bright light. She even winks to the camera as if she’s in on the joke — as if she knows it’s awful. (Kevin Maher)
The Guardian gives it two out of five stars:
Emerald Fennell cranks up the campery as she reinvents Emily Brontë’s tale of Cathy and Heathcliff on the windswept Yorkshire moor as a 20-page fashion shoot of relentless silliness, with bodices ripped to shreds and a saucy slap of BDSM. Margot Robbie’s Cathy at one stage secretly heads off to the moor for a hilarious bit of self-pleasuring – although, sadly, there are no audaciously intercut scenes of thirst-trap Heathcliff, played by Jacob Elordi, simultaneously doing the same thing in the stable, while muttering gruffly in that Yerrrrrkshire accent of his.
This then is Fennell’s Wuthering Heights, or rather “Wuthering Heights”; the title archly appears in inverted commas, although the postmodern irony seems pointless. Cathy is a primped belle quivering in the presence of Heathcliff, who himself is a moody, long-haired, bearded outsider, as if Scarlett O’Hara were going to melt into the arms of Charles Manson. However, he does get substantially Darcyfied up later on, rocking a shorter and more winsome hairstyle, his gossamer-thin shirt never dry.
As a child, young Cathy Earnshaw (Charlotte Mellington) is a pert miss, indulged by her roistering old twinkly eyed squire of a dad, in which role Martin Clunes pretty much pinches the whole film. Fennell incidentally abolishes the character of Cathy’s elder brother Hindley from the book (along with his wife and son) reassigning Hindley’s ruinous boozing and gambling to the father; Fennell also, in line with traditional WH adaptation, loses the next-gen second half of the novel, about the grownup children of Cathy, Hindley and Heathcliff. She also very feebly erases the issue of Heathcliff’s dark skin – and maybe those inverted commas are intended to shrug off issues of “authenticity”. [...]
As for the all-knowing housekeeper Nelly Dean (played by Hong Chau), she is the trickiest figure in the book, the person through whose eyes almost all the action is seen. Nelly is English literature’s uncrowned queen of the unreliable narrators, the deadpan witness-instigator of the central catastrophic misunderstanding that destroys Heathcliff and Cathy’s happiness. Interestingly, Fennell does get Cathy to confront Nelly on this point. At some stage, of course, things get real and a tsunami of tears is uncorked; it’s all in a frantically, exhaustingly Baz Luhrmann-esque style and the movie begins to resemble a 136-minute video for the Charli xcx songs on the soundtrack.
Wuthering Heights doesn’t have the live-ammo impact of Fennell’s earlier films Saltburn and Promising Young Woman or, indeed, Andrea Arnold’s flawed, brilliant, primitivist take on Brontë’s novel from 2011, which really did believe in the passionate truth of Cathy and Heathcliff’s love. For Fennell, it looks like a luxurious pose of unserious abandon. It’s quasi-erotic, pseudo-romantic and then ersatz-sad, a club night of mock emotion. (Peter Bradshaw)
More Bridgerton than Brontë for Mashable:
There's no question: This is not the Wuthering Heights Emily Brontë wrote. But Emerald Fennell (Promising Young Woman, Saltburn) never intended that. [...]
After all of this, it should surprise no one that Fennell's "Wuthering Heights" is radically different from Brontë's. The question is not if the film is faithful to the book, or even better than it. The question is, does this film work on its own terms, as a half-remembered fantasy of wild, enviable romance? And the answer is simply: No. [...]
However, despite the familiar framework, the dynamic of Catherine and Heathcliff in Fennell's film feels more like The Princess Bride than Wuthering Heights. For one thing, Heathcliff's cruelty is considerably softened. Like Westley, the sweet stable boy, he will suffer any abuse if it means being close to his blonde ladylove. In particular, Heathcliff will endure a violent whipping from Catherine's father, which gives the boy a chance to prove his immovable dedication to her.
Heathcliff's own violence and wrath in adulthood are channeled by Elordi into smoldering and brooding, with a tame frisson of kink, whether he's forcefully gripping Catherine's mouth or later degrading his bride, Edgar's ward Isabella (Alison Oliver) with pet play. Meanwhile, Catherine is a beautiful brat who, in the blink of an eye, goes from a rosy-cheeked child to a picture-perfect doll of a woman. So, of course, Fennell cast Barbie. [...]
Brontë fans might clutch their pearls that Fennell has not just a sex scene between Heathcliff and Catherine, but a montage of them, spanning from beds to carriages to the sweeping plains between their estates. And yet, while these scenes have the iconography of classic romance novels — the rich settings, the posh clothes, the forbidden attraction, the beautiful characters on the cover feigning elation — they fall flat. While Robbie is rigorous in bringing Catherine's ire and yearning to life, and Elordi is strong and seething, the pair have all the chemistry of Barbie and Ken dolls bumping rubber when they collide.
Perhaps to add Saltburn-like spice, BDSM is worked into various love scenes, bringing horse bridles, shackles, and a metal collar into sex games of degradation. This makes the depravity of the novel more playful than dark. Now, Heathcliff, who comes off like a towering Dom, is less threatening, as his violence is channeled through consensual kink. Yet this depiction of BDSM still feels half-hearted next to more successfully sexy and psychologically provocative films like Babygirl and Pillion. (Kristy Puchko)
Here is where Fennell shot herself in the foot somewhat; if you spend months and months excitedly telling everyone how shocking and sexy and mischievous your film is going to be – adaptation or not, faithful or divergent – you really have to deliver the goods. Wuthering Heights falls short by some margin. While Robbie and Elordi are fine actors in their own right – Elordi a recent, deserved Oscar nominee for his excellent turn in Frankenstein – they feel misjudged as Cathy and Heathcliff, too soft and sympathetic. While Robbie’s sunny countenance never quite clouds into vindictiveness, Elordi’s expressive brown eyes brought humanity to Frankenstein’s Creature but undercut Heathcliff’s brutality, exacerbated by the smoothing down of all his rough edges by Fennell’s script.
The bite is gone – we’re warned about his abusive nature but then it’s transformed into a possibly consensual agreement with the poor wretch Isabella Linton. There’s so little time spent building the romance between Cathy and Heathcliff it feels like the only thing they have in common is proximity. Their torrid love affair mostly takes place within a montage set to a Charli XCX song, which gives it all the emotional weight of a perfume advert. These sex scenes – which Fennell and Robbie have giddily teased in interviews – lack sensuality, and despite their best efforts Robbie and Elordi come across as fond co-workers more than star-crossed toxic lovers. The sexiest moment between Cathy and Heathcliff actually occurs when he gets on his knees and sucks on her finger after tearfully professing his love for her. That’s sensual cinema, not a quickie in a carriage or going legs akimbo down the back of the garden. 
The supporting cast fair no better. Edward Linton (Shazad Latif) is also retooled, now a nice but dull man who lives in a house so antithetical to his sensibilities it’s laughable we’re asked to believe he decorated it in such a manner. His ward Isabella Linton is a simple, spoiled young woman in awe of Cathy until she sets her sights on Heathcliff; Alison Oliver fairs well as the comic relief, though the character’s quick progression from helpless innocent to apparently willing submissive feels like an enormous jump. The standout in the cast is good old Martin Clunes as Cathy’s miserable drunkard father Mr. Earnshaw – a scene where he mocks Heathcliff’s affection for Cathy stands out as a highlight and one of the few instances where the emotional stakes of Wuthering Heights feel sincere. But Fennell can’t help but play his death for laughs, as if the film is allergic to letting anything too grimly tragic linger on screen.
In sanding down Heathcliff’s brutality he becomes less complex, reduced to a beautiful sad man with a broad Keighley accent and some billowing shirts. Fennell instead squarely positions Cathy’s maid Nelly (Hong Chau) as the true villain of the saga, a scheming, interfering scold who keeps Cathy and Heathcliff apart out of jealousy and is eventually responsible for the former’s untimely death. Her nuance is also lost in this lavish restaging, written off as the envy of a noble’s daughter born out of wedlock who can’t stand to see Cathy and Heathcliff happy. It’s a thankless role for Chau and absolves Cathy and Heathcliff, essentially writing off their own bad behaviour as little more than childish hair-pulling. (This is now the second film where Fennell has positioned a lower class character as the mastermind of a plot to bring down poor, helpless rich people.)
While fidelity to a novel is no guarantee of its success as an adaptation – some of the best adaptations are the most shamelessly unfaithful – one at least hopes that a filmmaker understands the text they’re trying to translate. Perhaps Fennell’s honesty in stating ​“There’s a version [of ​‘Wuthering Heights’] that I remember reading that isn’t quite real, and there are things I wanted to happen that never happened” should be commended, but it’s hard to come out of Wuthering Heights with a sense that Fennell really wanted to reckon with what Brontë’s book is actually about: class, abuse masked as love, generational trauma and the stories we tell ourselves to justify doing bad things and having bad things done to us. All this is stripped away in favour of telling a more straightforward tragic love story – one that has more in common with ​‘Romeo and Juliet’ (to the extent Isabella has a monologue recounting the plot of the play) than ​‘Wuthering Heights’. 
So what does Fennell bring to this world? Great gowns, beautiful gowns, by costume legend Jacqueline Durran, that nonetheless feel completely separate from the story being told around them. Suzie Davies’ undeniably impressive production design, particularly in making Thrushcross Grange feel like the Overlook Hotel if it was decorated by Simone Rocha, and one certified Charli XCX ft. John Cale anti-banger in ​‘House’ (the rest of the Charli songs used in the film feel intrusive, notably ​‘Chains of Love’ over the climactic, yet oddly lacking climax, Cathy and Heathcliff sex montage). Fennell’s eye for detail and ability to assemble a great roster of collaborators is not in dispute; she enthusiastically swings for the fences and there are absolutely striking visuals within Wuthering Heights, as there very much were in Saltburn (also shot by DoP Linus Sandgren). But what good is creating such a beautiful world if it’s so vacant? There is nothing that resonates below the surface here; this is a half-remembered story dressed in a beautiful gown that seems destined for TikTok fan edits and Pinterest mood boards rather than soul-stirring emotional catharsis. We are guided by the hand, instructed on how to feel at every moment, and trusted with nothing. If love cannot exist without trust, why are we doing any of this?
A final observation: in anticipation of the film’s release, Fennell programmed a series at the BFI IMAX of titles that inspired her version of Wuthering Heights, including Liliana Cavani’s The Night Porter, David Cronenberg’s Crash, Park Chan-Wook’s The Handmaiden, Baz Luhrmann’s Romeo + Juliet, Mervyn LeRoy’s Random Harvest and Catherine Breillat’s Bluebeard. A veritable bounty of great films that should have been a promising indicator of things to come, but in retrospect only serve as a warning that liking great art doesn’t necessarily result in making great art yourself. Then again, perhaps that’s never been Fennell’s intention. Great art certainly doesn’t sell H+M capsule collections or Kleenex brand collabs. (Hannah Strong)
The Film Verdict sums it up as 'Emerald Fennell’s take on Emily Brontë offers the sumptuous trash that has become the auteur’s trademark, but her departures from the original story fall flat'.
If Fennell makes Heathcliff somewhat less nefarious, she does the opposite to Catherine, launching her into a passionate and clandestine love affair with Heathcliff without informing him that she is already pregnant with Edgar’s child. The tinkering with Brontë’s plot is sensational yet not substantive, as if Fennell were striking out in a bold new direction only to lose her way, and as the running time lumbers along, this Wuthering Heights deflates.
What holds the film aloft along the way are some incisive performances, with Mellington and Cooper ably setting the stage for Robbie and Elordi. (Elordi pulling off Elvis, Frankenstein’s monster, and now Heathcliff in a matter of years counts as an impressive trifecta for an up-and-coming movie star.) Fennell, to her credit, understands the passion and glamour that her leads provide, together and separately, and luxuriates in their tortured romance.
Visually, the film offers a banquet, from Linus Sandgren’s cinematography — which captures the Gothic ruins of Wuthering Heights and the wind-swept moors with equal brio — to the costumes by Jacqueline Durran; once Catherine marries into money, her ensembles grow more colorful and elaborate and ridiculous, capturing a perfect Brontë Barbie aesthetic. Production designer Suzie Davies (Conclave) gives Edgar’s palatial Thrushcross Grange a sheen of precision, a dollhouse writ large with its own dollhouse duplicate contained inside, one that provides a sort of commentary on the flesh-and-blood people acting out all around it.
Even with all these talented artists putting forth an impressive effort, Fennell continues her journey into lush absurdity. She loves parallel imagery — the welts on Heathcliff’s back and a corset digging into Catherine’s flesh, a white snail spreading its way across a window and Catherine’s wedding train billowing across the landscape — but these echoes ring hollow, calling attention to themselves without revealing deeper meaning. There’s plenty of technique but very little artistry in Fennell’s storytelling; in her efforts to deliver serious cinema, she may be turning into one of this generation’s leading purveyors of camp. (Alonso Duralde)
The New Yorker thinks that the film is "extravagantly superficial":
Fennell indulges a familiar impulse to shock, or at least to jolt us awake. She deploys a heavy-breathing visual and musical style that embraces anachronism and exaggeration at every turn, and she infuses the action with a heightened sexual candor that’s meant to make past tellings of the tale look primly buttoned-up by comparison. (...) In one especially heated sequence, Catherine, overcome with lust, dashes off to the moors and pleasures herself ferociously against the rocks. Along comes Heathcliff, who, aroused by what he sees, lifts the little onanist up by her bodice straps and licks her fingers clean, like someone in a Kentucky Fried Chicken commercial. (...)
Fennell, it’s safe to say, has little interest in ephemera; she wants to emblazon her Catherine and Heathcliff on our brains. To that end, she and her collaborators, including the cinematographer Linus Sandgren and the production designer Suzie Davies, paint in the broadest of strokes. They unleash a full-blown stylistic assault roughly halfway through the film, around the time that Catherine becomes mistress of Thrushcross Grange. The hallways take on the gleaming aspect of a fashion runway, and in one room the floor is such a thick, gaudy shade of red that you half expect to find the elevator from “The Shining” around the corner. A dining table overflows with jellied extravagances; I’ve never seen a film with a greater aspic ratio. As for Catherine’s bedchamber, the walls almost qualify as body horror; they match her skin tone perfectly, right down to the blue-vein marbling. If Heathcliff won’t lick them, Hannibal Lecter surely would.
I haven’t yet broached the subject of Catherine’s wardrobe, which, courtesy of the costume designer Jacqueline Durran, swells to astonishing and undeniably lovely proportions. One gown mimics the hard shimmer of latex; another looks as crackly and translucent as cellophane. (I won’t forget the cleverly matched images of Catherine dressed for her wedding and, later, a funeral; on both occasions, her veil, whipping in the wind, does nothing to obscure her sorrow.) None of this remotely fits the period, and that is surely the point: Fennell means to present Catherine and Heathcliff’s love story as something transcendent, unfolding beyond the limits of time and history.  (...)
These are clever visual conceits, and Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” is certainly something to behold. I’m less convinced, for all its frenzied emoting and rain-soaked rutting, that it’s something to feel. (Justin Chang)
The Daily Beast thinks that the film is lame, uninspired fanfiction:
“Wuthering Heights” strips Brontë’s novel down to its bare bones, throws half of them away, adds some anachronistic Bridgerton-esque multicultural flavoring, and casts what’s left, including any repressed emotions or subtext, in obvious and overwrought terms. (...)
Wuthering Heights” is ultimately an immature reimagining devoid of its source’s nuance and complexity, and at a certain point, its interest in doing its own thing makes one wonder why Fennell didn’t instead craft an original tale unencumbered by expectations or prerequisites. (Nick Schager)
IGN thinks it is "a superficial facsimile of Emily Brontë's daring novel."
Robbie and Elordi are obviously very attractive people, and with the number of steamy sex scenes shoehorned in, you'd be forgiven for thinking this amounts to palpable chemistry. But it all feels too forced, like a sales bin, smutty romance novel come to life, working too hard to hide the erasure of Brontë's far more complex ideas about the hell of societal convention. (...)
Cinematographer Linus Sandgren does capture the tumultuous beauty of the Yorkshire Moors and the stormy atmosphere of the Heights estate, but the production design of Thrushcross Grange is jarringly anachronistic. It becomes a Gothic Barbie Dreamhouse (derogatory), with the costuming, though beautiful, more in keeping with an Alice in Wonderland film. Throw in Charli XCX's pulsating original songs and Anthony Willis's overwhelming score, and you've got a bombastic world that does more to distract than solidify the emotional journey of these iconic literary figures.
I don't believe all book-to-screen adaptations need to be carbon copies. And maybe if you haven't read the novel, "Wuthering Heights" will work for you. But I must have read a different book in my teens than Fennell, because her vision obscures my memory of it – as it will for many Wuthering Heights fans out there. (Hanna Ines Flint)
Film-Authority (2 out of 5):
Robbie is wide-eyed and jolly-hockey sticks energetic, Elodri (sic) plays a minor variation on his Frankenstein lunk, and somehow Nelly Dean (Hong Chau) emerges as the main character by default. And don’t even get your hopes up for a Kate Bush needle drop, there’s no ghosts, no supernatural trappings, not even anything Gothic about this Wuthering Heights; a withering review is what this travesty deserves and gets.
The very bad ones:

Collider claims that, 'Emily Brontë Is Absolutely Rolling in Her Grave':
. . .  going into Emerald Fennell's Wuthering Heights proves a jarring, vapid, and ultimately insulting experience. [...]
Rather than this story being one about generational trauma, which is finally dispelled when the children of these characters find happiness and love together, those descendants from the book are also erased — no Cathy Linton, no Linton Heathcliff, and, saddest of all, no Hareton Earnshaw. If you're unfamiliar with the novel, this narrative takes up almost half of the book. By robbing the story of these characters, this film can no longer be called Wuthering Heights.
Even worse, characters like Nelly (Hong Chau), Joseph (Ewan Mitchell), and Isabella Linton (Alison Oliver) are completely unrecognizable. Nelly goes from a well-meaning servant and quiet observer to a stifled bastard daughter of a lord who seems to harbor deep hate for Cathy. Joseph is transformed from a religiously violent and evil man into a servant who likes a bit of BDSM and ultimately is just sort of... there. Worst of all, Isabella turns from a naive, innocent without an ounce of cruelty, who is tortured by Heathcliff after their marriage, into a kinky, obsessive, and mean person. To list the amount of betrayals this film has inflicted on the source material would involve recounting the movie scene by scene, but this is only the tip of the iceberg.
The most corrupted part of Fennell's Wuthering Heights lies with its core characters. Cathy is, first and foremost, ill-cast with Margot Robbie in the role. Robbie is too old to play the character, and Cathy is less a wild child with a natural arrogance and defiance and more a whiny rich girl who worries about ruining her skirts if she's placed on a tree branch out on the moors. Rather than giving us tension between Cathy and Heathcliff, the film instantly pairs them together, heavy-handed in its reassurance that, at every turn, they are soulmates. This isn't a toxic love; this is two star-crossed lovers separated by circumstance and a poorly used miscommunication trope.
Robbie gives a completely unremarkable performance as Cathy, partially because a woman in her twenties might get away with being a brat, but a woman who appears in her mid-thirties is given a lot less slack on that front. The prime example is Oliver's Isabella, who is also a quirky brat, given a pass because she is young and naive — but this version of Cathy is also a poor match for Heathcliff, played by a dull Elordi, who turns the character into a defanged and besotted schoolboy. The two inanely repeat "I love you's" to each other for about half of the movie and quickly consummate their relationship, leading to some truly exhausting sex scenes that overstay their welcome.
All of this gives the impression that this isn't Heathcliff and Cathy, but Fennell's imagined romantic version of her own fantasies. Obviously, when a filmmaker takes on an adaptation, it's their prerogative to decide how loyal they wish to be to the source material. Stories that follow the source to the letter might be awful, while adaptations that go far off-book might end up being masterpieces. Many reactions have compared this film to Baz Luhrmann's gorgeous Romeo + Juliet, and while the stylistic decisions might reflect Luhrmann's use of color and modern fashion, his movie follows Shakespeare's play to the letter. Wuthering Heights is a botched mismatch of cobbled-together scenes more than anything else. The point of an adaptation is to keep the soul of the source alive. Scenes can be changed, characters can be combined or removed, but the heart of the story must remain; Wuthering Heights easily proves it is lacking both heart and soul. [...]
Atmospherically, Fennell's film tries to imitate that style, but the choices made in production design and costuming are baffling. It's a fever dream of a film, and not in a good way. Excessive use of non-organic textiles like polyester and latex makes the film look cheap. This must have been a creative decision from Fennell, as costume designer Jacqueline Durran has been no stranger to accurate and beautiful period costumes (having won Oscars for Anna Karenina and Little Women). Similarly, production designer Suzie Davis, who has worked on projects like Conclave and Mr. Turner, turns the home of Wuthering Heights into rubble while transforming Thrushcross Grange into a clownish carnival.
Don't get me wrong, Wuthering Heights is still a beautiful film. Linus Sandgren's cinematography means every scene pops off the screen. Similarly, Anthony Willis' sweeping score accents the wild moors perfectly (though fewer compliments can be lauded to Charli xcx's contribution). But it's a film that's ultimately hollow, with a bizarre tone that toes the line between surreal and serious. There are purposefully comedic moments that make the story feel almost like a parody, leaning into absurdism, as well as scenes soaked in serious melodrama that weigh everything down. Couple that with the Forever 21 fashion, funhouse sets, and heavy-handed homages to Gone With the Wind, and it's just further proof that this is a soulless adaptation best reserved for Tumblr than the silver screen.
While there's a laundry list of mistakes that Fennell makes throughout the film, the largest takeaway is that this is closer to an original story than anything that Emily Brontë ever wrote. Replacing complexity and nuance with melodrama might mask the film enough for those unfamiliar with the book to take it as a romance. Given that it lacks the true substance of the original story — a deep understanding of the racial, societal, and class divides between Heathcliff and the other characters — Wuthering Heights is a waste of two hours of your time. (Therese Lacson)
A.V. Club thinks that the film is "overlong and undersexed":
Everyone becomes embroiled in bitter jealousy and plays cruel emotional games to torture each other. An overtly sensual slant is ostensibly supposed to cement this story in Fennell’s style, but the salaciousness falls short of feeling genuinely provocative. Instances of masturbation, voyeurism, adultery, and BDSM-lite simply lack the smack of taboo. (...)
If there’s one rebellious thing in Wuthering Heights, it’s the transfixing costume and production design. The beauty of Cathy’s ensembles only intensifies as the film progresses, a small salve during a bloated 136-minute runtime. Jacqueline Durran—who also dressed Robbie in Barbie and otherwise has ample experience working with period garb—is abstract and playful, opting for bold patterns, unique fabrics, and an unorthodox dismissiveness regarding period accuracy. (...)
Overlong and undersexed, Fennell’s version of Wuthering Heights betrays her audience of edgelords and perverts. Even stranger, those who have fostered a distaste for the filmmaker’s sensibility will similarly find themselves disappointed. It’s one thing to make art that can be read as indulgent, ill-conceived, and tasteless—it’s another to turn around and make something that’s just boring in comparison. Robbie and Elordi transmit an undeniable chemical connection, but the absence of truly titillating carnal depravity means the film isn’t arousing, just annoying. (Natalia Keogan)
The Independent goes further and calls the film an "astonishingly bad adaptation like a limp Mills & Boon":
Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi’s performances are almost pushed to the border of pantomime, while Fennell’s provocations seem to define the poor as sexual deviants and the rich as clueless prudes. (...)
Fennell, in her script, has conflated Heathcliff’s chief abuser, Hindley, with Cathy’s father Mr Earnshaw (Martin Clunes), and made Cathy and Heathcliff equal targets of his violence. This, in turn, flattens the entire story into that of a poor maiden who escapes her dire circumstances by marrying a wealthy man, Edgar, who loves her but is dull, all while she yearns for her soulmate who has not a penny to his name. When Heathcliff leaves, only to come back rich, it’s presented here as a romcom makeover and not a man’s mission to acquire enough financial power to ruin the lives of everyone he hates.(...)
But when faced with Brontë’s own vivid, thorny language, all those fantastical red riding hoods and arm-shaped candle holders look as garish as a live-action Disney film. If there’s an exception, it’s Charli xcx’s and Anthony Willis’s musical contributions, which offer a dread that’s missing from everywhere else. (...)
Perhaps there’s a more graceful takeaway from all this. If “Wuthering Heights” were true to the spirit of what it feels like to read Wuthering Heights, at any age, it wouldn’t be a film you could market with brand tie-ins and Valentine’s Day screenings. It would disturb people. So, what is Fennell’s loss is only Brontë’s gain. She remains singular. (Clarisse Loughrey)

World of Reel tries to make an urgent (but incomplete) summary of the published reviews. Forbes and Daily Mail, Digital Spy and The Mirror do something similar. Rotten Tomatoes is more comprehensive.